-ary
English
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English -arie, a back-formation from Latin and French-borrowed adjectives ending respectively in -ārius and -aire (more rarely from Latin adjectives in -āris: see exemplary and lapidary). Doublet of -eer, -yer, -ar, and -ier; see also the related -arian.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ə.ɹi/, /ɹi/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ə.ɹi/, /ɛɹ.i/
Suffix
-ary
- Of or pertaining to. an adjectival suffix appended to various words, often nouns, to produces adjectives. Often added to words of Latin origin, but used with other words also.
- (nonproductive) Ending of some substantives borrowed or inherited from Latin and French.
- (mathematics) Having the specified arity.
- Synonym: -adic
- 1927, A. D. Campbell, “The discriminant of the m-ary quadratic in the Galois fields of order 2n”, in Annals of Mathematics, Second Series 29:1-4:
- 2007, Philippe Leroux, “A simple symmetry generating operads related to rooted planar m-ary trees and polygonal numbers”, in Journal of Integer Sequences, 10:4:
Derived terms
English terms suffixed with -ary
Translations
of or pertaining to
having the specified arity
See also
- Appendix:English arities and adicities