Yes. Although there are a lot of exceptions, the general rule for oxyanions (most polyatomic ions you probably have to memorize) is:
-ate = Some element with some number of oxygens, usually 3. Ex: Chlorate = ClO3-
-ite = The same element with one less oxygen. Ex: Chlorite: ClO2-
hypo- ... -ite = One less oxygen than -ite. Ex: Hypochlorite: ClO-
per- ... -ate = One more oxygen than -ate. Ex: Perchlorate: ClO4-
Changing the number of oxygens in the anion will not change the charge.
Also
Bi-/Hydrogen- = The original ion with a hydrogen attached. Ex: Bisulfate/Hydrogen phosphate = HPO42-
Prefix + Hydrogen- = The ion with some number of hydrogens attached. Ex: Dihydrogen phosphate = H2PO4-
Every hydrogen added will increase the ion's charge by 1.
Other than that, I recommend just creating or running through an existing Quizlet. There are a lot of strange patterns, even with oxyanions, and you do have to remember where the -ate ion is before knowing any of the other forms.
Hope this helped.