Noun

Wikipedia has an article on: Declension

Wikipedia declension (plural declensions)

  1. (grammar): 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.
  2. (grammar): The act of declining a word; the act of listing the inflections of a noun, pronoun or adjective in order.

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From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mon Jul 26 21:10:55 2010

In linguistics, declension is the occurrence of inflection in nouns, pronouns, articles, and adjectives, indicating such features as number (typically singular vs. plural), case (subject, object, and so on), gender, and possession. Declension occurs in a great many of the world's languages, and features very prominently in many European languages, but is much less prominent in English. English nouns decline only to distinguish singular from plural (e.g., book vs. books); only very few English adjectives decline (the French loan-word blond(e) being a rare exception), and only a few English pronouns show vestiges of case-triggered declension (e.g., nominative case he, dative case or accusative case him, genitive case (possessive case) his). As detailed below, English was once a highly inflected language, as befitting its Indo-European and especially its Germanic linguistic ancestry, but it became greatly simplified as it evolved.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Mon Jul 26 19:59:58 2010

How do you decline 1st/2nd declension neuter adjectives in latin?
Q. How do you decline 1st/2nd declension neuter adjectives in latin?
Asked by TomMac - Wed Jun 18 10:11:57 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. First of all, an adjective cannot have a gender. However, if the noun it modifies is is neuter, then the adjective has specific "neuter" forms that correspond with the noun's apparent case. A simple 1st/2nd declension adjective is magnus, -a, -um. I'll decline this adjective as an example: singular (neuter) nominative - magnum genitive - magni dative - magno accusative - magnum ablative - magno vocative - magnum PLURAL (neuter) nominative - magna genitive - magnorum dative - magnis accusative - magna ablative - magnis vocative - magna **it is helpful to note that a 1st/2nd declension adjective is declined in the neuter in the same way that a 2nd declension neuter noun is declined
Answered by Milly - Wed Jun 18 10:17:01 2008

Where can I find a complete declension table for Russian verbs/nouns/adjectives?
Q. Anyone know a good site where I can find a table / chart / diagram showing all the conjugations (nominative -> dative)? Would be really helpful! Thanks.
Asked by Alex B - Sun Feb 7 18:59:16 2010 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Not sure if this is it, but it's a start, I suppose. ;)
Answered by wolf_1312 - Sun Feb 7 19:17:28 2010

Germans. Inflection and declension. Do these words mean the same thing?
Q. if possilble, give me one exp. of inflection and one of declension to show me the difference.
Asked by jebber - Sun Mar 14 21:54:25 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. No. Inflection means the addition of affixes on or alterations of a word that reflects agreement in number, gender, case, tense, mood, aspect, perhaps register. Declension is the inflection of nouns, adjectives, and pronouns. It also means grouping of nouns according to shared case endings. In the German context, those three parts of speech are marked by endings indicating case, number, and gender. Finally, the inflected forms of the same word constitute a paradigm.
Answered by Opt to Opine - Sun Mar 14 21:58:14 2010

From Yahoo Answer Search: "declension"
Sat Jul 24 05:04:01 2010

American Great Declension - Gather.com
news.google.com
American Great Declension

Gather.com

... the current wars, the credit market crisis, the housing market crisis, the banking system toxic asset crisis, the capital market declension crisis, ...
First Things First: You Need to Pay Attention - Jewish Exponent
news.google.com
First Things First: You Need to Pay Attention

Jewish Exponent

Parshah Vaera begins with God introducing Godself to Moses by the ineffable four-letter divine name, YHVH, a declension of the Hebrew verb "to be. ...

Parashat Va'era: Healing, one plague at a time Jerusalem Post

The vort for Va'era: Hearing and Redemption Jewschool (blog)



all 3 news articles »
Reappraising the Right: The Past and Future of American Conservatism - Heritage.org
news.google.com
Reappraising the Right: The Past and Future of American Conservatism

Heritage.org

This is not necessarily a sign of declension , but it certainly testifies to the growing passage of time: The conservative movement has now been around long ...



and more »

From Google News Search: "declension"
Sat Jul 17 08:11:37 2010

declension1 jpg
pixelpretation.com
declension1 jpg
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[source page]

a trite retread of decengine November 16 2008

Declensions jpg
maravot.com
Declensions jpg
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[source page]



Arkinetia Felice Varini y la misteriosa segunda dimension de la
arkinetia.com
Arkinetia Felice Varini y la misteriosa segunda dimension de la
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[source page]



From Yahoo Image Search: "declension"
Sat Jul 17 08:11:38 2010

The Basics
actiontale.com
The Basics

Sol

Mon, 05 Jul 2010 18:08:00 GM

The galatic language is made with a Topic-Comment structure, where Articles and . Declension. Cases marking words to make a free Word Order sentence formation, but essencially the Topic is the First Argument of a Phrase. Arts (Articles) ...

floating aingeal
deepestinstinct.blogspot.com
floating aingeal

Angela

hu, 15 Jul 2010 17:43:00 GM

Etymology. From Old Irish aingel < Late Latin angelus < Ancient Greek (angelos), 'messenger' ). [edit] Noun. aingeal m. angel. [edit] . Declension. . First . declension. . Bare forms: Case, Singular, Plural. Nominative, aingeal, aingil ...

How hard is Russian grammar compared to English grammar ...
grammers.net
How hard is Russian grammar compared to English grammar ...

admin

Wed, 21 Jul 2010 05:44:44 GM

I would say it is significantly harder, due to the different cases, and therefore the different endings used in words, which can change due to gender, number, or case . declension. . The nominative case answers the questions "who?/what?". ...

From Google Blog Search: "declension"
Wed Jul 28 01:36:38 2010