The New Oxford American Dictionary reports the following definitions for in-:
in- 1
prefix
1. (added to adjectives) not: inanimate | intolerant.
2. (added to nouns) without; lacking: inadvertence | inappreciation.
in- 2
prefix
in; into; toward; within: induce | influx | inborn.
Looking at the origin of infamous, and inflammable, I read the following:
infamous
ORIGIN late Middle English: from medieval Latin infamosus, from Latin infamis (based on fama 'fame').
inflammable
ORIGIN early 17th century: from French, or from Latin inflammare (see inflame).
In both the cases, the words are not built adding the prefix in- to existing words.
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