"-30- (released as Deadline Midnight in the UK) is a 1959 movie starring William Conrad and Jack Webb as the editor and publisher, respectively, of a fictional Los Angeles evening newspaper. As the shift of a typical day starts, in which they don't know what will happen, the newspaper is created before our eyes as different stories are discovered and reported."@en . "The suffix -al is the IUPAC nomenclature used in organic chemistry to form names of aldehydes containing the -(CO)H group. It was extracted from the word \"aldehyde\"."@en . "The suffix -ane is used in organic chemistry to form names of organic compounds where the -C-C- group has been attributed the highest priority according to the rules of organic nomenclature. The final \"-e\" disappears if it is followed by a suffix that starts with a vowel, e.g. \"propanol\"."@en . "The English suffix -archy (from Greek \u03B1\u03C1\u03C7\u03AE, rule) denotes leadership and government. See Political philosophy and politics."@en . "The suffix -ase is used in biochemistry to form names of enzymes. The most common way to name enzymes is to add this suffix onto the end of the substrate, e.g. an enzyme that breaks down peroxides may be called peroxidase. Sometimes enzymes are named for the function they perform, rather than substrate, e.g. the enzyme that joins DNA strands is called polymerase (it polymerizes DNA). "@en . "-Ballad Best Singles- White Road is the fourth released greatest hits album from the Japanese rock band, GLAY. The album peaked at #1 at Oricon charts, with 411,521 copies sold."@en . "The English suffix -cide denotes an act related to killing. From Latin caedere \"to cut, kill, hack (at), strike\". In its wider meaning, it may also signify the destruction or dismantling of an object or concept. When attached to a word indicating an animal or plant considered to be pestilent, the combined word is frequently used to indicate a substance used to eliminate the pest in question. E.g. Pesticide, insecticide and herbicide"@en . "The English suffix -cracy means a form of government or a state having such government. "@en . "\"-e\u015Fti\" is a widespread Romanian suffix used indicating a placename, being in fact a plural of the possessive suffix \"-escu\", formerly used for patronyms and currently widespread for family names. An obsolete form is \"-esci\" or \"-e\u015Fci\", being sometimes used before the beginning of the 20th century. Another form sometimes found is \"-\u0103\u015Fti\". In some areas in Romania, more than half of the placenames have this suffix. "@en . "-eaux is a common ending for historically Cajun surnames like Babineaux, Boudreaux, Breaux, Marceaux and Thibodeaux. Despite its somewhat confusing appearance, this combination of letters is pronounced with a long \"O\" sound."@en . "The suffix -ene is used in organic chemistry to form names of organic compounds where the -C=C- group has been attributed the highest priority according to the rules of organic nomenclature. Sometimes a number between hyphens is inserted before it to state atom the double bond starts at. This suffix is taken from the end of the word ethylene, which is the simplest alkene. The final \"-e\" disappears if it is followed by a suffix that starts with a vowel, e.g. \"-enal\" which is a compound that contains both a -C=C- bond and an aldehyde functional group. If the other suffix starts with a consonant, the final \"-e\" remains, e.g. \"-enediyne\" (which has the \"-ene\" suffix and also the \"-yne\" suffix, for a compound with a double bond and two triple bonds.) A Greek number prefix before the \"-ene\" indicates that many double bonds, e.g. "@en . "-genesis, from Greek \"\u03B3\u03B5\u03BD\u03BD\u03B9\u03C3\u03B9\u03C2\", origin, creation, generation, is a suffix that denotes creation. Related to genos, meaning \"race, birth, descent\" and genus which shows a relation from the same origin."@en . "The English suffix -graphy means either \"writing\" or a \"field of study\", and is an anglicization of the French -graphie inherited from the Latin -graphia, which is a transliterated direct borrowing from Greek."@en . "The Gry Puzzle is a popular puzzle that asks for the third English word, other than \"angry\" and \"hungry,\" that ends with the letters \"-gry.\" Aside from words derived from \"angry\" and \"hungry,\" there is no stand-alone word ending in \"-gry\" that is in current usage. Both Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged (Merriam-Webster, Inc., 2002, ISBN 0-87779-201-1) and the Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition contain the compound word \"aggry bead.\" To find a third word ending in -gry that is not part of a phrase, you must turn to archaic, obsolete, or uncommon words, or personal or place names, a comprehensive list of which is given at the end of this article. "@en . "Distinguish from the word holism, which describes properties of systems. In contemporary modern English \"-holic\" is a suffix that can be added to a subject to denote an addiction to it. The term is derived from alcoholism, one of the first addictions to be widely identified both medically and socially. It should be noted that the word alcoholism is broken up into the root, \"alcohol\", and the suffix \"-ism\", not \"alco\" and \"-holism\". The suffix \"-holism\" is truly a new invention, having taken the syllable hol directly from the root word. The morphemic breakdown of the word \"alcohol\" is actually from Arabic al, meaning \"the\" and kuhul meaning \"paint\". "@en . "-hood is an English suffix that means a \"state or condition of\" or a group sharing a certain characteristic. Examples include childhood and falsehood. "@en . "-hou is a suffix found commonly in Channel Islands and Norman names. It is the Norman language version of the Old Norse holmr, meaning a small island, and often found anglicised elsewhere as \"holm\". It can still be found in modern Scandinavian languages, e.g. Stockholm. "@en . "\"-I'll-\" is a single released by Dir en grey on August 12, 1998. The video of the title track would later be featured on the Mousou Toukakugeki VHS."@en . "The Modern English adjectival suffix -ic was first seen as a suffix in English during the Middle English period. It was borrowed in words from Old French '-ique', which came from Latin '-icus', which came ultimately from Ancient Greek '-\u03B9\u03BA\u03BF\u03C2 (-ikos)'. There are some that contend that '-icus' was native to Latin and was cognate with rather than borrowed from Greek. At any rate, t