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  2. Quizlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quizlet

    Quizlet's primary products include digital flash cards, matching games, practice electronic assessments, and live quizzes. In 2017, 1 in 2 high school students used Quizlet. [ 4 ] As of December 2021, Quizlet has over 500 million user-generated flashcard sets and more than 60 million active users.

  3. Uninflected word - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uninflected_word

    In linguistic morphology, an uninflected word is a word that has no morphological markers such as affixes, ablaut, consonant gradation, etc., indicating declension or conjugation. If a word has an uninflected form, this is usually the form used as the lemma for the word. [1] In English and many other languages, uninflected words include ...

  4. Grammar of late Quenya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammar_of_late_Quenya

    Declining is the process of inflecting nouns; a set of declined forms of the same word is called a declension. Parmaquesta has ten cases (including short variants). These include the four primary cases: nominative , accusative , genitive , and instrumental ; three adverbial cases: allative (of which the dative is a shortened form), locative ...

  5. Declension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declension

    In linguistics, declension (verb: to decline) is the changing of the form of a word, generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence, by way of some inflection. Declensions may apply to nouns , pronouns , adjectives , adverbs , and determiners .

  6. Weak inflection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weak_inflection

    There are also strong and weak declensions of German adjectives. This differs from the situation in nouns and verbs in that every adjective can be declined using either the strong or the weak declension. As with the nouns, weak in this case means the declension in -n. In this context, the terms "strong" and "weak" seem particularly appropriate ...

  7. Old High German declension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_High_German_declension

    This declension was much more reduced compared to other old Germanic languages such as Old English. Most nouns were transferred outright to the i-or sometimes the a-declension, and the remaining nouns were heavily influenced by the i-declension—only the nominative and accusative singular are different, ending in -u.

  8. Traditional grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_grammar

    Syntax is the set of rules governing how words combine into phrases and clauses. It deals with the formation of sentences, including rules governing or describing how sentences are formed. [22] In traditional usage, syntax is sometimes called grammar, but the word grammar is also used more broadly to refer to various aspects of language and its ...

  9. Ancient Greek nouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_nouns

    The second or omicron declension is thematic, with an -ο or -ε at the end of the stem. It includes one class of masculine and feminine nouns and one class of neuter nouns. When a second-declension noun is accented on the ultima, the accent switches between acute for the nominative, accusative, and vocative, and circumflex for the genitive and ...