-ation

See also: -âtion

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Inherited from Middle English -acioun / -acion,, derived from Old French -acion / -ation, derived from Latin -ātiō, an alternative form of -tiō (whence -tion). By surface analysis, -ate +‎ -ion.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-ation

  1. An action or process.
    sediment + ‎-ation → ‎sedimentation
  2. The result of an action or process.
    found + ‎-ation → ‎foundation
  3. A state or quality.
    color + ‎-ation → ‎coloration

Derived terms

English terms suffixed with -ation
adultisation

Translations

Anagrams

French

Alternative forms

Etymology

    Inherited from Middle French -ation, from Old French -ation, borrowed from Latin -ātiō. In words inherited through Vulgar Latin, the same suffix yielded -aison.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /a.sjɔ̃/
    • Rhymes: -ɔ̃

    Suffix

    -ation f (plural -ations)

    1. Used to indicate action, condition, result or effect; -ation

    Derived terms

    French terms suffixed with -ation

    Middle English

    Suffix

    -ation

    1. alternative form of -acioun

    Middle French

    Alternative forms

    Etymology

      Inherited from Old French -ation, borrowed from Latin -ātiō.

      Suffix

      -ation

      1. -ation

      Descendants

      • French: -ation

      Old French

      Alternative forms

      Etymology

        Borrowed from Latin -ātiō.

        Suffix

        -ation

        1. -ation

        Descendants

        Portuguese

        Etymology

        Unadapted borrowing from English -ation.

        Pronunciation

        • (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈej.ʃõ/ [ˈeɪ̯.ʃõ]

        Suffix

        -ation f (noun-forming suffix, uncountable)

        1. (humorous) used instead of -ção to give the word an air of formality or anglicization
          enrolar (to beat around the bush) + ‎-ation → ‎enrolation (beating around the bush)
          faturar (to profit) + ‎-ation → ‎faturation (profits)