| The author is careful not to mock nineteenth century religious sensibilities, nor to denounce commercialization as an example of declension. |
|
| The present is thus perceived as that period of declension that is the subject of the jeremiad. |
|
| Peter Milsom gave two very practical papers on spiritual growth and spiritual declension. |
|
| The declension of the adjective interrogative pronoun is like that of the relative one. |
|
| A convenient summary of Latin declension and conjugation is available on-line here. |
|
| As a sentence, it cannot be made plural by adding the nominative plural suffix for second declension nouns. |
|
| This is true of nominatives of all nouns other than some third declension consonant stems. |
|
| The gender of the word alone is ambiguous, occurring in a declension denoting either males or females. |
|
| In the absence of a declension class, neuter agreement is assigned. |
|
| Czech is a Slavic language with a declension system based on seven cases. |
|
| The fifth declension is unlikely because those nouns are all feminine. |
|
| In Latin, if a word is second declension, it will be masculine. |
|
| From the stretched canvas to the stuffed cushion, we switch over to the third declension of the pictorial spelling of Clic. |
|
| A handcrafted aperitif offering a nice declension of aromas, with a great sweetness in the mouth. |
|
| Launched in January 2004, these events take place every 3 months and are a declension of the annual festival. |
|
| Twirling leaves, already dried out, whose life draws to a close in an infinite declension of half-tones. |
|
| The artist offers a declension in four works serving as prisms to highlight the subject. |
|
| Being gendered, all the higher scale names follow the declension rules of Serbian. |
|
| For more information on the forms of Latin relative pronouns, see the section on relative pronouns in the article on Latin declension. |
|
| The inflections express gender, number, and case in adjectives, nouns, and pronouns, a process called declension. |
|
|
|
| An 8th century inscription in Tywyn shows the language already dropping inflections in the declension of nouns. |
|
| The declension of pronouns has been preserved in all Slavic languages. |
|
| The message and its declension will be operated through posters, leaflets, tastings, particularly in this region, open days and then a larger range of targetted actions. |
|
| In particular, this is because it does not just concern a specific vocabulary, but primarily involves systemic changes influencing declension and conjugation. |
|
| Implemantations: Research of a concept in adequacy with the product caracteristics and the companys' visual identity for a declension on all the tools. |
|
| They also share the fact that they are both adjectives, so their first letter is not uppercased, and they do not imply the declension of their multiplier if any. |
|
| She adds a declension to the use of the glass. |
|
| Implementations: Research of a creative concept in adequcy with the characteristics of this new lipstick, and the declension on communication tools such as the data sheet. |
|
| This declension remains in the same aesthetics line as its elder brother. It can blend itself in any kind of conventional or more contemporary home design. |
|
| With no colorant at all, our pastis has kept its white colour and you experience the pleasure to have in the mouth, a beautiful declension of its aromas. |
|
| For this reason Modern French has only a single adjective declension, unlike most other Romance languages which have two or more. |
|
| Some dialects and variants of Nynorsk furthermore have different declension of weak and strong feminines and neuters. |
|
| The weakening of unstressed syllables merged many different Old Dutch classes of nominal declension. |
|
| Below is the declension of the English pronoun I, which is inflected for case and number. |
|
| In general, weak nouns are less complex than strong nouns, since they had begun to lose their system of declension. |
|
| Sanskrit has six declension classes, whereas Latin is traditionally considered to have five, and Ancient Greek three declension classes. |
|
| Hungarian declension is relatively simple with regular suffixes attached to the vast majority of nouns. |
|
| Modern Russian has a singular vs plural number system, but the declension of noun phrases containing numeral expressions follows complex rules. |
|
| The plural of the noun is usually obtained by adding a suffix, according to the noun's declension. |
|
| Modern English, which almost entirely lacks declension in its nouns, does not have an explicitly marked accusative case even in the pronouns. |
|
|
|
| There is a wide variety of accusative markers depending on gender, number and declension. |
|
| These classes are briefly reviewed in order to show how they gave way to the weak declension over a period of 1500 years. |
|
| Then there are the models, most of which seem to have been drawn from a list of first declension Latin nouns. |
|
| Unusual in other language families, declension in most Slavic languages also depends on whether the word is a noun or an adjective. |
|
| Most Western European languages have greatly reduced levels of inflection, particularly noun declension. |
|
| Its declension is defective, in the sense that it lacks a reflexive form. |
|
| In Latin, the names of trees were usually feminine, but many were declined in the second declension paradigm, which was dominated by masculine or neuter nouns. |
|
| At the end of the Old Saxon period, distinctions between noun classes began to disappear, and endings from one were often transferred to the other declension, and vice versa. |
|
| The impact of weak declension is most evident in forms of the genitive pl. |
|
| The system of declension of nouns was radically simplified and analogized. |
|
| A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is called a declension. |
|
| An organized list of the inflected forms of a given lexeme or root word, is called its declension if it is a noun, or its conjugation if it is a verb. |
|
| Low German declension has only two morphologically marked noun cases, where accusative and dative together constitute an oblique case, and the genitive case has been lost. |
|
| Class Ia mostly comes from feminine third declension nouns in Latin. |
|