-acalcompound suffix; consisting of -al1repr. L. -ālis, -āle ‘of the nature of, belonging to,’ added to -ac (q.v.), which although strictly an adj. ending was so often used substantively, e.g.demoniac, maniac, ammoniac, aphrodisiac, that it became usual to make the adj. in -acal even when no n. occurs, as heliacal. As in the cogn. -ic, -ical, adjectives in -ac are primary objective attributes, of or pertaining to the thing, while adjectives in -acal are only secondary, of the nature of or connected with the attribute in -ac, or its embodiment, hence more remotely and subjectively relating to the thing; e.g. the cardiac arteries, a cardiac (medicine), cardiacal qualities of a herb. But this distinction is not always observed. Examples: ammoniacal, aphrodisiacal, cardiacal, demoniacal, heliacal, hypochondriacal, maniacal, paradisiacal, prosodiacal, theriacal.
-acal/ək(ə)l/suffix.
ORIGIN: from -ac + -al1.
Forming adjectives from adjectives and nouns in -ac (as hypochondriacal) and occas. from adjectives with no corresp. noun (as heliacal); often used to distinguish nouns from adjectives (as maniac, maniacal).
-acal
(Received Pronunciation) IPA: /ək.l̩/
(US) IPA: /ək.l̩/
Suffix
Used to form an adjective from a noun, as in maniacal