Advertisement
Advertisement
-ium
- a suffix found on nouns borrowed from Latin, especially derivatives of verbs ( odium; tedium; colloquium; delirium ), deverbal compounds with the initial element denoting the object of the verb ( nasturtium ), other types of compounds ( equilibrium; millennium ), and derivatives of personal nouns, often denoting the associated status or office ( collegium; consortium; magisterium ); -ium also occurs in scientific coinages on a Latin model, as in names of metallic elements ( barium; titanium ) and as a Latinization of Gk -ion ( pericardium ).
-ium
suffix forming nouns
- indicating a metallic element
platinum
barium
- (in chemistry) indicating groups forming positive ions
hydroxonium ion
ammonium chloride
- indicating a biological structure
syncytium
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of -ium1
< New Latin, Latin, neuter suffix
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of -ium1
New Latin, from Latin, from Greek -ion, diminutive suffix
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse