preformant

See also: préformant

English

Etymology

From English pre- (prefix meaning ‘before; physically in front of’) + Latin fōrmāns (fashioning, forming, shaping) + English -ant (suffix forming agent nouns from verbs), modelled after prefix.[1] Fōrmāns is the present participle of fōrmō (to fashion, form, format, shape), from fōrma (appearance, figure, form, shape; beauty; design, outline, plan; model, mould, pattern, stamp; (figuratively) kind, manner, sort) (further etymology uncertain) + (suffix forming first-conjugation verbs).

Pronunciation

Noun

preformant (plural preformants)

  1. (grammar, archaic, rare) Chiefly in Semitic languages: Synonym of preformative (a formative letter, syllable, etc., at the beginning of a word)
    • 1822, William Harris, “Verbs”, in Elements of the Chaldee Language, Intended as a Supplement to the Hebrew Grammars, and as a General Introduction to the Aramean Dialects, London: [] William Baynes and Son, [], OCLC 926527423, page 14:
      Verbs are declined through the persons by preformants and terminations, according to the following table, in which the blanks represent the radicals of a perfect verb.

References

Further reading

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