declension

listen to the pronunciation of declension
Englisch - Türkisch
{i} gerileme
(Dilbilim) çöküş
olumlu cevap
ad çekimi
çekim

Latincede beş çekim vardır. - In Latin there are five declensions.

tasrif
{i} sapma
çökme
{i} dilb. ad çekimi
{i} bozulma
değişik anlamlarını verme
gram isim çekimi
Englisch - Englisch
: The act of declining a word; the act of listing the inflections of a noun, pronoun or adjective in order
: A way of categorizing nouns, pronouns, or adjectives according to the inflections they receive

In Latin, 'amicus' belongs to the second declension. Most second-declension nouns end in '-i' in the genitive singular and '-um' in the accusative singular.

the change of endings in nouns and adj. to express their different relations of gender
{n} a variation of nouns, corruption of morals, decay, decline, diminution, change
the inflection of nouns and pronouns and adjectives in Indo-European languages
Act of courteously refusing; act of declining; a declinature; refusal; as, the declension of a nomination
A way of categorizing nouns, pronouns, or adjectives according to the inflections they receive
Inflection of nouns, adjectives, etc
The act of declining a word; the act of listing the inflections of a noun, pronoun or adjective in order
according to the grammatical cases
a class of nouns or pronouns or adjectives in Indo-European languages having the same (or very similar) inflectional forms; "the first declension in Latin"
The form of the inflection of a word declined by cases; as, the first or the second declension of nouns, adjectives, etc
process of changing to an inferior state
The act or the state of declining; declination; descent; slope
The movement in New England away from the ideals of the founding fathers, which gave rise to tensions between settlers who adhered to the original mission and those who were attracted to commercial values
a downward slope or bend
A term associated with the Massachusetts Bay Colony, referring to the declining zeal of later generations or movement away from the utopian ideals of those Puritan leaders, such as John Winthrop, who founded the colony As an example of declension, see half‑way covenant
{i} (Grammar) variation of the form (of a noun, verb, etc.); decline, descent, slope
Rehearsing a word as declined
Group sharing common inflections to which an OE noun or adjective belongs Each of the columns on the item-arrangement grammar shows a declension's basic pattern The largest noun declension in OE was the a-stem strong masculine nouns
A group of nouns which share the same ending (5 in total, we learned 3)
A falling off towards a worse state; a downward tendency; deterioration; decay; as, the declension of virtue, of science, of a state, etc
grammatical form of nouns and adjectives
declination
decl
first declension
In Latin, a pattern of inflection of a group of nouns that are declined (inflected) in the same way, and which have an -a- in their stems

Most first declension nouns are feminine, but a few like agricola and nauta are masculine.

mixed declension
In German grammar, the declension pattern for attributive adjectives that follow the indefinite article ein, kein and possessive determiners such as mein and dein
strong declension
A class of words in many Germanic languages including English, which inflect or conjugate irregularly rather than by suffixation; as, for the sake of example, in the case of the noun goose (the plural of which is geese) and the verb sing (the past form of which is sang, and the past participle form of which is sung)
weak declension
The declension pattern of a weak noun
declensions
plural of declension
grammatical declension
giving of various endings or forms to different words (Grammar)
noun declension
inflection of nouns to show number or case (Grammar)
declension

    Silbentrennung

    de·clen·sion

    Aussprache

    Etymologie

    () From Middle English declenson, from Middle French declinaison (French: déclinaison), from Latin declinatio (gen. declinationis)
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