-th

See also: Appendix:Variations of "th"

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /-θ/

Etymology 1

From Middle English -the, -th, -te, -t (abstract nominal suffix), from Old English , -t, -þu, -tu, -þo, -to (-th, abstract nominal suffix), from Proto-Germanic *-iþō, from Proto-Indo-European *-iteh₂. Cognate with Scots -th, West Frisian -te, Dutch -te, Low German -de, Danish -de, Swedish -d, Icelandic , -d, Gothic -𐌹𐌸𐌰 (-iþa), Latin -itās (-ty, -ity). See -ity, -t.

Suffix

-th

  1. (no longer productive) Used to form nouns from verbs of action.
    grow + ‎-th → ‎growth
    heal + ‎-th → ‎health
    steal + ‎-th → ‎stealth
    bear + ‎-th → ‎birth
  2. (no longer productive except in informal coinages) Used to form nouns of quality from adjectives.
    warm + ‎-th → ‎warmth
    long + ‎-th → ‎length
    wide + ‎-th → ‎width
    deep + ‎-th → ‎depth
    strong + ‎-th → ‎strength
Alternative forms
Synonyms
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Middle English -the, -th, -te, -t (ordinal suffix), from Old English -þa, -þe, -oþa, -oþe, derived from a Proto-Indo-European superlative suffix. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Suffix

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cat4=productive suffixes
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-th

  1. Used to form the ordinal numeral when the final term of the spelled number is not “first”, “second”, or “third”.
    1. (mathematics) Used to form a term denoting the ordinal numeral corresponding to the value, being a natural number, of a mathematical expression.
      The th term of a geometrical progression whose first term is and common ratio is is given by .
  2. Used to form the denominator of a fraction.
    one seventh; three tenths
Usage notes
  • Some numbers undergo a change in spelling: five + ‎-th → ‎fifth, eight + ‎-th → ‎eighth, nine + ‎-th → ‎ninth, twenty + ‎-th → ‎twentieth. See -eth
  • Use of this suffix with numbers ending in one, two, or three is occasionally heard in speech, particularly in forming fractions (**thirty-twoth) but is considered highly nonstandard.
  • In older texts, this suffix, and the other suffixes for forming ordinals, may be seen written as superscripts: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th. This is considered old-fashioned; the current preference is to write (when not spelling the numbers), 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th.
  • When used to suffix a mathematical expression, a hyphen is sometimes inserted: -th term.
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
English terms suffixed with -th (ordinal)
Translations

Etymology 3

From Middle English -eth, -th, from Old English -eþ, -aþ, .

Suffix

-th

  1. (archaic) A variant of -eth, used to form the archaic third-person singular indicative present tense of verbs.
    comecometh
    havehath
    dodoth
    saysaith

Anagrams

Albanian

Etymology

Derived from Proto-Albanian *-ts, from Proto-Indo-European *-ḱos.

Suffix

-th m

  1. Used to form the diminutive.

Derived terms

Middle English

Etymology 1

Originally two distinct suffixes:

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /-θ/, /-d/, /-t/

Suffix

-th

  1. (no longer productive) Forms abstract nouns denoting a state or attribute, usually from adjectives but occasionally from verbs; -th, -ness
Derived terms
Middle English terms suffixed with -th
Descendants
  • English: -th, -t (conflated with -the < *-iþō)
  • Scots: -th, -t (conflated with -the < *-iþō)
References

Etymology 2

Suffix

-th

  1. alternative form of -the (abstract nominal suffix)

Etymology 3

Suffix

-th

  1. alternative form of -the (ordinal suffix)

Mohawk

Suffix

-th

  1. forms instrumentals

References

  • Nora Deering; Helga H. Delisle (1976), Mohawk: A teaching grammar (preliminary version), Quebec: Manitou College, page 417