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  2. Fusional language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusional_language

    Fusional languages generally tend to lose their inflection over the centuries, some much more quickly than others. [6] Proto-Indo-European was fusional, but some of its descendants have shifted to a more analytic structure such as Modern English, Danish and Afrikaans or to agglutinative such as Persian and Armenian.

  3. Morphological typology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphological_typology

    Analytic languages encompass the Sino-Tibetan family, including Chinese, many languages in Southeast Asia, the Pacific, and West Africa, and a few of the Germanic languages. Fusional languages encompass most of the Indo-European family—for example, French, Russian, and Hindi—as well as the Semitic family and a few members of the Uralic family

  4. Category:Fusional languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Fusional_languages

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  5. Synthetic language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_language

    A synthetic language is a language that is statistically characterized by a higher morpheme-to-word ratio. Rule-wise, a synthetic language is characterized by denoting syntactic relationships between words via inflection or agglutination, with fusional languages favoring the former and agglutinative languages the latter subtype of word synthesis.

  6. Mixed language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixed_language

    A mixed language, also referred to as a hybrid language, contact language, or fusion language, is a language that arises among a bilingual group combining aspects of two or more languages but not clearly deriving primarily from any single language. [1]

  7. Polysynthetic language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polysynthetic_language

    reindeer -ssur -hunt -qatar - FUT -ni -say -ksaite - NEG -ngqiggte -again -uq - 3SG. IND tuntu -ssur -qatar -ni -ksaite -ngqiggte -uq reindeer -hunt -FUT -say -NEG -again -3SG.IND "He had not yet said again that he was going to hunt reindeer." Except for the morpheme tuntu "reindeer", none of the other morphemes can appear in isolation. [a] Whereas isolating languages have a low morpheme-to ...

  8. Agglutinative language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agglutinative_language

    Agglutinative languages have generally one grammatical category per affix while fusional languages combine multiple into one. The term was introduced by Wilhelm von Humboldt to classify languages from a morphological point of view. [1] It is derived from the Latin verb agglutinare, which means "to glue together". [2]

  9. Morphology (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphology_(linguistics)

    An agglutinative language is Turkish (and practically all Turkic languages). Latin and Greek are prototypical inflectional or fusional languages. It is clear that this classification is not at all clearcut, and many languages (Latin and Greek among them) do not neatly fit any one of these types, and some fit in more than one way.