Select the word that takes -some as a suffix to form an adjective. (Some…

2019

Select the word that takes -some as a suffix to form an adjective.

(Some change may be required in the spelling.)

  1. A.

    trouble

  2. B.

    comfort

  3. C.

    sense

  4. D.

    wonder

Attempted by 63 students.

Show answer & explanation

Correct answer: A

Key rule: The suffix -some turns nouns into adjectives meaning "characterized by" or "causing" the quality named by the noun.

  • How to form: Usually add -some directly. If the noun ends in a silent 'e', the 'e' is typically retained before -some (for example, trouble + some → troublesome).

  • Meaning: The resulting adjective often means "causing" or "characterized by" the noun (e.g., troublesome = causing trouble).

  • Why the other choices are not correct:

    comfort → commonly forms 'comfortable' or 'comforting', not 'comfortsome'.

    sense → forms 'sensible' or 'senseless', not 'sensesome'.

    wonder → forms 'wondrous' or 'wonderful', not 'wondersome' in modern usage.

Answer: trouble → troublesome (meaning: causing trouble).

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