| -acious (Latin: a suffix; inclined to, given to, tendency to be, abounding in).A suffix that forms adjectives.capacious:Able to hold much; roomy, spacious, wide. efficacious: Capable of producing a desirable effect; effective.
 fallacious: 1. Containing fundamental errors in reasoning.  2. Misleading, deceptive. loquacious: Extremely talkative, gabby.
 mendacious: Not truthful, lying or false; such as a mendacious story.
 pugnacious: Having a quarrelsome, combative disposition, belligerent; an eagerness to fight or argue issues instead of calm consideration.
 rapacious: 1. Taking by force, plundering.  2. Ravenous; greedy. sagacious: Having or showing sound judgment and keen perception, wise; farsightedness.
 salacious: 1. Sexually appealing or stimulating; lascivious; lecherous.  2. Lustful; bawdy. spacious: Offering or containing much space or room; extensive.
 tenacious: Holding or tending to hold firmly; persistent.
 veracious: 1. Truthful, honest.  2. Accurate; precise. vivacious: Filled with animation and spirit; lively, brisk.
 voracious: Consuming, or eager to consume, great amounts of food, ravenous; marked by an unsatisfied appetite for an activity or a pursuit, greedy; as a voracious reader or a voracious writer.
 audacious: bibacious: fugacious: fumacious: inveracious: linguacious: multiloquacious: obstinacious: perspicacious: predacious: scribacious: sebacious: soliloquacious: somniloquacious: umbracious: unfallacious: vitrificacious: |