| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
| an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle. |
| -y or -ey1 | |
| —suffix forming adjectives | |
| 1. | (from nouns) characterized by; consisting of; filled with; relating to; resembling: sunny; sandy; smoky; classy |
| 2. | (from verbs) tending to; acting or existing as specified: leaky; shiny |
| [from Old English -ig, -ǣg] | |
| -ey or -ey1 | |
| —suffix forming adjectives | |
| [from Old English -ig, -ǣg] | |
| -y, -ie or -ey2 | |
| —suffix | |
| 1. | denoting smallness and expressing affection and familiarity: a doggy; a granny; Jamie |
| 2. | a person or thing concerned with or characterized by being: a groupie; a fatty |
| [C14: from Scottish -ie, -y, familiar suffix occurring originally in names, as in Jamie (James)] | |
| -ie, -ie or -ey2 | |
| —suffix | |
| [C14: from Scottish -ie, -y, familiar suffix occurring originally in names, as in Jamie (James)] | |
| -ey, -ie or -ey2 | |
| —suffix | |
| [C14: from Scottish -ie, -y, familiar suffix occurring originally in names, as in Jamie (James)] | |
| -y, -ie or -ey2 | |
| —suffix | |
| 1. | denoting smallness and expressing affection and familiarity: a doggy; a granny; Jamie |
| 2. | a person or thing concerned with or characterized by being: a groupie; a fatty |
| [C14: from Scottish -ie, -y, familiar suffix occurring originally in names, as in Jamie (James)] | |
| -ie, -ie or -ey2 | |
| —suffix | |
| [C14: from Scottish -ie, -y, familiar suffix occurring originally in names, as in Jamie (James)] | |
| -ey, -ie or -ey2 | |
| —suffix | |
| [C14: from Scottish -ie, -y, familiar suffix occurring originally in names, as in Jamie (James)] | |
| -y3 | |
| —suffix forming nouns | |
| 1. | (from verbs) indicating the act of doing what is indicated by the verbal element: inquiry |
| 2. | (esp with combining forms of Greek, Latin, or French origin) indicating state, condition, or quality: geography; jealousy |
| [from Old French -ie, from Latin -ia] | |