-x
suffix/ks/
Etymology
The letter x is prototypically pronounced [ks] in English; it therefore serves as a convenient shorthand for the digraphs (cs, ks, etc.) or trigraphs (cks etc.) that would otherwise represent that consonant cluster.
Definitions
Used to represent a value that may vary
Used to represent a value that may vary: see x.
- I teach all of the 30x classes.
Used to replace a /ks/ sound, especially in monosyllabic words ending in -cks or -ks.
- blax (“blacks”), clox (“clocks”), fax (“facts”), folx (“folks”), hax (“hacks”), pix (“pics”), punx (“punks”), shox (“shocks”), snax (“snacks”), sox (“socks”), stix (“sticks”), tix (“tickets”), trax (“tracks”)
An abbreviation marker.
- Dx (“diagnosis”), elex (“election”), Hx (“history”), pax (“passenger”), RX (“receive”), TX (“transmit”)
›+ 2 more definitionsshow fewer
Used to replace a gendered suffix.
- alumnx, Chicanx, Latinx
Abbreviation of -cross.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for -x. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA