Y09W27VC Word Roots — -quir/-ques- (seek/ask)
The root -quir- / -ques- comes from Latin and carries the core meaning of 'to seek' or 'to ask'. It appears in words related to inquiry, questioning and the pursuit of information or truth. Understanding this root helps students recognise a key family of academic and legal terms used to describe how knowledge is sought and tested. This module explores six Academic Vocab words alongside three further examples in the Word Families section.
Word Families
These three word-family examples show how -quir/-ques- carries the idea of 'seek/ask' into more complex words. Notice how the shared root can help you unlock meaning and use each word more accurately in academic writing.
require
/rɪˈkwaɪə/
re‑quire
verb | [require – required – required]
To need something as essential, necessary or compulsory.
Word Breakdown: re- (prefix meaning 'again' or 'back') + -quir- (root meaning 'to seek' or 'to ask for')
Example: A persuasive argument requires not only a clear claim but also specific, relevant evidence and logical reasoning.
Synonyms: need, demand, necessitate
Collocations: require evidence, as required, require action
inquest
/ˈɪnkwɛst/
in‑quest
noun
An official investigation into the cause of a death or other significant incident; a formal inquiry.
Word Breakdown: in- (prefix meaning 'into') + -ques- (root meaning 'to ask' or 'to seek') + -t (noun suffix)
Example: The coroner's inquest found that the deaths were preventable and recommended urgent changes to safety protocols.
Synonyms: inquiry, investigation, examination
Collocations: hold an inquest, coroner's inquest, conduct an inquest
query
/ˈkwɪəri/
que‑ry
noun
A question or request for information; also a feeling of doubt or uncertainty about something.
Word Breakdown: -quer- (variant of -ques-, meaning 'to ask' or 'to seek') + -y (suffix forming a noun)
Example: Several members of the audience raised a query about the methodology used to collect the survey data.
Synonyms: question, enquiry, doubt
Collocations: raise a query, respond to a query, query the evidence
Academic Vocab
consequently
/ˈkɒnsɪkwəntli/
con‑se‑quent‑ly
adverb
As a result or effect of what has just been described; therefore.
Word family: consequence (n.), consequential (adj.)
Example: The government failed to act on the early warnings; consequently, the crisis escalated beyond what had been anticipated.
Synonyms: therefore, as a result, hence
Collocations: consequently, the... ; and consequently; consequently leading to
therefore
/ˈðɛəfɔː/
there‑fore
adverb
For that reason; as a logical conclusion of what has just been stated.
Example: The evidence contradicts the hypothesis; therefore, the research team must revise their theoretical framework.
Synonyms: consequently, hence, as a result
Collocations: therefore conclude, therefore it follows, therefore we can
hence
/hɛns/
hence
adverb
For this reason; as a result of this; a more formal equivalent of "therefore".
Example: The original data was corrupted; hence, the entire experiment had to be repeated from the beginning.
Synonyms: therefore, consequently, as a result
Collocations: hence, the... ; hence why; and hence
thus
/ðʌs/
thus
adverb
In this way; as a result; used to introduce a conclusion or consequence in a formal register.
Example: The policy reduced funding to community services and thus widened inequality between high and low socioeconomic areas.
Synonyms: therefore, consequently, in this way
Collocations: thus creating, thus allowing, and thus
as a result
/æz ə rɪˈzʌlt/
as a re‑sult
phrase
Used to introduce a consequence or outcome that follows from what was previously stated.
Example: The infrastructure investment was withdrawn; as a result, development in the region stalled for nearly a decade.
Synonyms: therefore, consequently, hence
Collocations: as a result of, as a direct result, and as a result
consequently
/ˈkɒnsɪkwəntli/
con‑se‑quent‑ly
adverb
As a result or effect of what has just been described; therefore.
Word family: consequence (n.), consequential (adj.)
Example: The government failed to act on the early warnings; consequently, the crisis escalated beyond what had been anticipated.
Synonyms: therefore, as a result, hence
Collocations: consequently, the... ; and consequently; consequently leading to
Confusing Words
persuades vs compels vs coerces vs influences
These verbs all describe changing someone’s thinking or behaviour, but the level of force is different.
- persuades — Persuades' means to convince someone through reasons, emotion or evidence; for example, 'The speech persuades listeners to support reform.'
- compels — Compels' means to strongly force or drive someone to act, sometimes through pressure; for example, 'The evidence compels the reader to reconsider the issue.'
- coerces — Coerces' means to force someone through threats, pressure or unfair power; for example, 'The regime coerces citizens into silence.'
- influences — Influences' means to shape someone’s view or behaviour, often less directly; for example, 'Media coverage influences public opinion.'
Memory rule: Use 'persuades' for convincing, 'influences' for shaping, 'compels' for strong pressure and 'coerces' for unfair or forceful pressure.
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