-ce

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English

Suffix

-ce

  1. (chiefly after 1, 2, or 3) Times: used to form a multiplicative numeral from a cardinal numeral.
    • 1809, abridgement of, 1758, Rob. Whytt, "On the Remarkable Effects of Blisters in Lessening the Quickness of the Pulse in Coughs, attended with Infarction of the Lungs and Fever" (Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, volume fifty, page 569), in, Charles Hutton, George Shaw, and Richard Pearson, The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Abridged, volume eleven, page 222 [1]:
      Her stomach being extremely delicate, he scarcely ordered any medicines for her all this time, except a cordial julep, with spir. volat. oleos. tinct. of rhubarb as a laxative, and a julep of aqu. rosar. acet. [illegible] alb. and syr. bals. of which last she took 2 table spoonfuls 2ce or 3ce a day in ¼ of a pint of lintseed tea.
    • 1998 January 21, "LT" <elsta(at)zeelandnet.nl>, "Novell 32bit client for NT - have to log in 2ce???", message-ID <34C5C8D6.7927D6B@zeelandnet.nl>, comp.os.netware.connectivity, Usenet:
      Whenever a user tries to login [] , a second login box comes up and they have to log in twice, apparently once for Novell, and once for the NT domain.
    • 2003 August 23, "Pinky" [Trevor A Panther] <tapan@SPAMLESSblueyonder.co.uk>, "Re: Plastic corks - UK", message-ID <Ziy1b.2042$O62.16624775@news-text.cableinet.net>, rec.crafts.winemaking, Usenet [2]:
      What you need is a "synthetic" corks which are about 2ce or 3ce the price of cork "corks" and any good home brew shop will be able to supply.

Anagrams


Czech

Suffix

-ce

  1. -or, -er
    vládnout + ‎-ce → ‎vládce
  2. -tion
    Latin gradātiōgradace

Derived terms

Further reading


Khumi Chin

Alternative forms

  • Lua error in Module:parameters at line 360: Parameter 1 should be a valid language or etymology language code; the value "Khimi Chin" is not valid. See WT:LOL and WT:LOL/E. -che

Pronunciation

Suffix

-ce

  1. Used to form plurals of personal pronouns.
    kai (I) + ‎-ce → ‎kaice (we)

Derived terms

References

  • K. E. Herr (2011) The phonological interpretation of minor syllables, applied to Lemi Chin[3], Payap University

Latin

Etymology 1

From Proto-Italic *-ke, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱe (here).

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

Suffix

-ce (particle)

  1. affixed, usually to demonstratives, forming deixes
    ce- + -docedo
    ec- + -ceecce
    hi- + -chic
    ille + -cillic
    tum + -ctunc
Derived terms

References

Etymology 2

A regularly declined form of -cus.

Suffix

Template:la-suffix-form

  1. vocative masculine singular of -cus

Middle English

Suffix

-ce

  1. Alternative form of -yssh

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *-ьce.

Suffix

-ce (Cyrillic spelling -це)

  1. Appended to words to create a neuter noun, usually to form a diminutive or as an expression of endearment, or to denote an object.

See also


Turkish

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish ـجه.

Suffix

-ce

  1. like, -like, -ly; -ish; as if, as though; in the way of
  2. Used to form adverbs from nouns and adjectives.
    gizli (secret) + ‎-ce → ‎gizlice (secretly)
  3. -ish: Used to form languages from a demonym/nationality.
    İngiliz (English) + ‎-ce → ‎İngilizce (English language) (literally "like an English person")
  4. -ian, -ese: Used to form languages from the name of a country or region.
    Çin (China) + ‎-ce → ‎Çince (Chinese language) (literally "in the way of China")

Usage notes

  • It's used when the nationality word's last vowel is one of "e", "i", "ö" or "ü" and the last consonant is one of "b", "c", "d", "g", "ğ", "j", "l", "m", "n", "r", "v", "y" or "z"
  • It can become -ca, -ça, -çe according to the last vowel and the last consonant of the word.

Derived terms