Is there a suffix in "masquerade"?

Is there a suffix in masquerade?

in masquerade, masque means mask, so is -rade or -ade its suffix?

-ade is a suffix in lemonade and blockade, meaning "product".

Note: I have searched it in etymonline, but couldn't find my answer


The word apparently comes from Spanish máscara "mask", which according to most scholars comes from Arabic sakhira "to ridicule", so says the Oxford English Dictionary. Some scholars rather believe it comes from a Germanic root. (Perhaps surprisingly, there is less consensus about the English word mask: it may come from the same Arabic root, or from a different Latin root derived from a Germanic root, or from a combination of both.)

The Spanish suffix -(a)da means something like "abstract noun related to x", and Spanish mascarada means "masquerade". English has -e because it was borrowed through French, in which language feminine -a is regularly converted into -a. The Spanish suffix comes from Latin -(a)ta, the feminine past participle.