![Inflection](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8wLzA3L0MlQzMlQjlfY29pbi5zdmcvMTYwMHB4LUMlQzMlQjlfY29pbi5zdmcucG5n.png )
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations.(June 2019) |
In linguistic morphology, inflection (less commonly, inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, and definiteness. The inflection of verbs is called conjugation, while the inflection of nouns, adjectives, adverbs, etc. can be called declension.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHdMekEzTDBNbFF6TWxRamxmWTI5cGJpNXpkbWN2TVRnd2NIZ3RReVZETXlWQ09WOWpiMmx1TG5OMlp5NXdibWM9LnBuZw==.png)
An inflection expresses grammatical categories with affixation (such as prefix, suffix, infix, circumfix, and transfix), apophony (as Indo-European ablaut), or other modifications. For example, the Latin verb ducam, meaning "I will lead", includes the suffix -am, expressing person (first), number (singular), and tense-mood (future indicative or present subjunctive). The use of this suffix is an inflection. In contrast, in the English clause "I will lead", the word lead is not inflected for any of person, number, or tense; it is simply the bare form of a verb. The inflected form of a word often contains both one or more free morphemes (a unit of meaning which can stand by itself as a word), and one or more bound morphemes (a unit of meaning which cannot stand alone as a word). For example, the English word cars is a noun that is inflected for number, specifically to express the plural; the content morpheme car is unbound because it could stand alone as a word, while the suffix -s is bound because it cannot stand alone as a word. These two morphemes together form the inflected word cars.
Words that are never subject to inflection are said to be invariant; for example, the English verb must is an invariant item: it never takes a suffix or changes form to signify a different grammatical category. Its categories can be determined only from its context. Languages that seldom make use of inflection, such as English, are said to be analytic. Analytic languages that do not make use of derivational morphemes, such as Standard Chinese, are said to be isolating.
Requiring the forms or inflections of more than one word in a sentence to be compatible with each other according to the rules of the language is known as concord or agreement. For example, in "the man jumps", "man" is a singular noun, so "jump" is constrained in the present tense to use the third person singular suffix "s".
Languages that have some degree of inflection are synthetic languages. They can be highly inflected (such as Georgian or Kichwa), moderately inflected (such as Russian or Latin), weakly inflected (such as English), but not uninflected (such as Chinese). Languages that are so inflected that a sentence can consist of a single highly inflected word (such as many Native American languages) are called polysynthetic languages. Languages in which each inflection conveys only a single grammatical category, such as Finnish, are known as agglutinative languages, while languages in which a single inflection can convey multiple grammatical roles (such as both nominative case and plural, as in Latin and German) are called fusional.
Examples in English
In English most nouns are inflected for number with the inflectional plural affix -s (as in "dog" → "dog-s"), and most English verbs are inflected for tense with the inflectional past tense affix -ed (as in "call" → "call-ed"). English also inflects verbs by affixation to mark the third person singular in the present tense (with -s), and the present participle (with -ing). English short adjectives are inflected to mark comparative and superlative forms (with -er and -est respectively).
There are eight regular inflectional affixes in the English language.
Affix | Grammatical category | Mark | Part of speech |
---|---|---|---|
-s | Number | plural | nouns |
-'s/'/s | Case | genitive | nouns and noun phrases, pronouns (marks independent genitive) |
-ing | Aspect | progressive | gerunds or participles |
-en/-ed | Aspect | perfect | verbs |
-ed/-t | Tense | past (simple) | verbs |
-s | Person, number, aspect, tense | 3rd person singular present indicative | verbs |
-er | Degree of comparison | comparative | adjectives and adverbs |
-est | Degree of comparison | superlative | adjectives and adverbs |
Despite the march toward regularization, modern English retains traces of its ancestry, with a minority of its words still using inflection by ablaut (sound change, mostly in verbs) and umlaut (a particular type of sound change, mostly in nouns), as well as long-short vowel alternation. For example:
- Write, wrote, written (marking by ablaut variation, and also suffixing in the participle)
- Sing, sang, sung (ablaut)
- Foot, feet (marking by umlaut variation)
- Mouse, mice (umlaut)
- Child, children (ablaut, and also suffixing in the plural)
For details, see English plural, English verbs, and English irregular verbs.
Regular and irregular inflection
When a given word class is subject to inflection in a particular language, there are generally one or more standard patterns of inflection (the paradigms described below) that words in that class may follow. Words which follow such a standard pattern are said to be regular; those that inflect differently are called irregular.
For instance, many languages that feature verb inflection have both regular verbs and irregular verbs. In English, regular verbs form their past tense and past participle with the ending -[e]d. Therefore, verbs like play, arrive and enter are regular, while verbs like sing, keep and go are irregular. Irregular verbs often preserve patterns that were regular in past forms of the language, but which have now become anomalous; in rare cases, there are regular verbs that were irregular in past forms of the language. (For more details see English verbs and English irregular verbs.)
Other types of irregular inflected form include irregular plural nouns, such as the English mice, children and women (see English plural) and the French yeux (the plural of œil, "eye"); and irregular comparative and superlative forms of adjectives or adverbs, such as the English better and best (which correspond to the positive form good or well).
Irregularities can have four basic causes:[citation needed]
- euphony: Regular inflection would result in forms that sound esthetically unpleasing or are difficult to pronounce (English far → farther or further, Spanish tener → tengo, tendré vs. comer → como, comeré, Portuguese vs. Spanish andar → Portuguese andaram vs. Spanish anduvieron).
- principal parts: These are generally considered to have been formed independently of one another, so the student must memorize them when learning a new word. Example: Latin dīcō, dīcere, dīxī, dictum → Spanish digo, decir, dije, dicho.
- strong vs. weak inflection: In some cases, two inflection systems exist, conventionally classified as "strong" and "weak." For instance, English and German have weak verbs that form the past tense and past participle by adding an ending (English jump → jumped, German machen → machte) and strong verbs that change vowel, and in some cases form the past participle by adding -en (English swim → swam, swum, German schwimmen → schwamm, geschwommen). Ancient Greek verbs are likewise said to have had a first aorist (ἔλῡσα) and a second aorist (ἔλιπον).
- suppletion: The "irregular" form was originally derived from a different root (English person → people). The comparative and superlative forms of good in many languages display this phenomenon (e.g. eng. good, better, best).
For more details on some of the considerations that apply to regularly and irregularly inflected forms, see the article on regular and irregular verbs.
Declension and conjugation
Two traditional grammatical terms refer to inflections of specific word classes:
- Inflecting a noun, pronoun, adjective, adverb, article or determiner is known as declining it. The forms may express number, case, gender or degree of comparison.
- Inflecting a verb is called conjugating it. The forms may express tense, mood, voice, aspect, person, or number.
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.
Below is the declension of the English pronoun I, which is inflected for case and number.
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | I | we |
oblique | me | us |
possessive determiner | my | our |
possessive pronoun | mine | ours |
reflexive | myself | ourselves |
The pronoun who is also inflected according to case. Its declension is defective, in the sense that it lacks a reflexive form.
singular and plural | |
---|---|
nominative | who |
oblique | whom (traditional), who (informal) |
possessive | whose |
reflexive | – |
The following table shows the conjugation of the verb to arrive in the indicative mood: suffixes inflect it for person, number, and tense:
Tense | I | you | he, she, it | we | you | they |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | arrive | arrive | arrives | arrive | arrive | arrive |
Past | arrived | arrived | arrived | arrived | arrived | arrived |
The non-finite forms arrive (bare infinitive), arrived (past participle) and arriving (gerund/present participle), although not inflected for person or number, can also be regarded as part of the conjugation of the verb to arrive. Compound verb forms, such as I have arrived, I had arrived, or I will arrive, can be included also in the conjugation of the verb for didactic purposes, but they are not overt inflections of arrive. The formula for deriving the covert form, in which the relevant inflections do not occur in the main verb, is
- pronoun + conjugated auxiliary verb + non-finite form of main verb.
Inflectional paradigm
An inflectional paradigm refers to a pattern (usually a set of inflectional endings), where a class of words follow the same pattern. Nominal inflectional paradigms are called declensions, and verbal inflectional paradigms are termed conjugations. For instance, there are five types of Latin declension. Words that belong to the first declension usually end in -a and are usually feminine. These words share a common inflectional framework. In Old English, nouns are divided into two major categories of declension, the strong and weak ones, as shown below:
gender and number | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Masculine | Neuter | Feminine | ||||
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
case | Strong noun declension | |||||
engel 'angel' | scip 'ship' | sorg 'sorrow' | ||||
Nominative | engel | englas | scip | scipu | sorg | sorga |
Accusative | engel | englas | scip | scipu | sorge | sorga/sorge |
Genitive | engles | engla | scipes | scipa | sorge | sorga |
Dative | engle | englum | scipe | scipum | sorge | sorgum |
case | Weak noun declension | |||||
nama 'name' | ēage 'eye' | tunge 'tongue' | ||||
Nominative | nama | naman | ēage | ēagan | tunge | tungan |
Accusative | naman | naman | ēage | ēagan | tungan | tungan |
Genitive | naman | namena | ēagan | ēagena | tungan | tungena |
Dative | naman | namum | ēagan | ēagum | tungan | tungum |
The terms "strong declension" and "weak declension" are primarily relevant to well-known dependent-marking languages[citation needed] (such as the Indo-European languages,[citation needed] or Japanese). In dependent-marking languages, nouns in adpositional (prepositional or postpositional) phrases can carry inflectional morphemes.
In head-marking languages, the adpositions can carry the inflection in adpositional phrases. This means that these languages will have inflected adpositions. In Western Apache (San Carlos dialect), the postposition -ká’ 'on' is inflected for person and number with prefixes:
Singular | Dual | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | shi-ká | on me | noh-ká | on us two | da-noh-ká | 'on us' |
2nd | ni-ká | on you | nohwi-ká | 'on you two' | da-nohwi-ká | 'on you all' |
3rd | bi-ká | 'on him' | – | da-bi-ká | 'on them' |
Traditional grammars have specific terms for inflections of nouns and verbs but not for those of adpositions.[clarification needed]
Compared to derivation
Inflection is the process of adding inflectional morphemes that modify a verb's tense, mood, aspect, voice, person, or number or a noun's case, gender, or number, rarely affecting the word's meaning or class. Examples of applying inflectional morphemes to words are adding -s to the root dog to form dogs and adding -ed to wait to form waited.
In contrast, derivation is the process of adding derivational morphemes, which create a new word from existing words and change the semantic meaning or the part of speech of the affected word, such as by changing a noun to a verb.
Distinctions between verbal moods are mainly indicated by derivational morphemes.
Words are rarely listed in dictionaries on the basis of their inflectional morphemes (in which case they would be lexical items). However, they often are listed on the basis of their derivational morphemes. For instance, English dictionaries list readable and readability, words with derivational suffixes, along with their root read. However, no traditional English dictionary lists book as one entry and books as a separate entry; the same goes for jump and jumped.
Inflectional morphology
Languages that add inflectional morphemes to words are sometimes called inflectional languages, which is a synonym for inflected languages. Morphemes may be added in several different ways:
- Affixation, or simply adding morphemes onto the word without changing the root;
- Reduplication, repeating all or part of a word to change its meaning;
- Alternation, exchanging one sound for another in the root (usually vowel sounds, as in the ablaut process found in Germanic strong verbs and the umlaut often found in nouns, among others);
- Suprasegmental variations, such as of stress, pitch or tone, where no sounds are added or changed but the intonation and relative strength of each sound is altered regularly. For an example, see Initial-stress-derived noun.
Inflection through reduplication
Reduplication is a morphological process where a constituent is repeated. The direct repetition of a word or root is called total reduplication (or full reduplication). The repetition of a segment is referred to as partial reduplication. Reduplication can serve both derivational and inflectional functions. A few examples are given below:
Value | Language | Original | Reduplicated |
---|---|---|---|
Plurality | Indonesian | buku 'book' | buku-buku 'books' |
Distribution | Standard Chinese | ren24 'person' | ren24 ren24 'everyone' |
Intensity | Taiwanese Hokkien | ang24 'red' | ang24 ang24 'reddish' |
Imperfective | Ilokano | ag-bása 'read' | ag-basbása 'reading' |
Inchoative | Nukuoro | gohu 'dark' | gohu-gohu 'getting dark' |
Progressive | Pazeh language | bazu’ 'wash' | baabazu’ 'be washing' |
Inflection through tone change
Palancar and Léonard provided an example with Tlatepuzco Chinantec (an Oto-Manguean language spoken in Southern Mexico), where tones are able to distinguish mood, person, and number:
1 SG | 1 PL | 2 | 3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Completive | húʔ1 | húʔ13 | húʔ1 | húʔ2 |
Incompletive | húʔ12 | húʔ12 | húʔ12 | húʔ2 |
Irrealis | húʔ13 | húʔ13 | húʔ13 | húʔ2 |
Case can be distinguished with tone as well, as in Maasai language (a Nilo-Saharan language spoken in Kenya and Tanzania) (Hyman, 2016):
gloss | Nominative | Accusative |
---|---|---|
'head' | èlʊ̀kʊ̀nyá | èlʊ́kʊ́nyá |
'rat' | èndérònì | èndèrónì |
In various languages
Indo-European languages (fusional)
Because the Proto-Indo-European language was highly inflected, all of its descendant Indo-European languages, such as Albanian, Armenian, English, German, Ukrainian, Russian, Persian, Kurdish, Italian, Irish, Spanish, French, Hindi, Marathi, Urdu, Bengali, and Nepali, are inflected to a greater or lesser extent. In general, older Indo-European languages such as Latin, Ancient Greek, Old English, Old Norse, Old Church Slavonic and Sanskrit are extensively inflected because of their temporal proximity to Proto-Indo-European. Deflexion has caused modern versions of some Indo-European languages that were previously highly inflected to be much less so; an example is Modern English, as compared to Old English. In general, languages where deflexion occurs replace inflectional complexity with more rigorous word order, which provides the lost inflectional details. Most Slavic languages and some Indo-Aryan languages are an exception to the general Indo-European deflexion trend, continuing to be highly inflected (in some cases acquiring additional inflectional complexity and grammatical genders, as in Czech & Marathi).
English
Old English was a moderately inflected language, using an extensive case system similar to that of modern Icelandic, Faroese or German. Middle and Modern English lost progressively more of the Old English inflectional system. Modern English is considered a weakly inflected language, since its nouns have only vestiges of inflection (plurals, the pronouns), and its regular verbs have only four forms: an inflected form for the past indicative and subjunctive (looked), an inflected form for the third-person-singular present indicative (looks), an inflected form for the present participle (looking), and an uninflected form for everything else (look). While the English possessive indicator 's (as in "Jennifer's book") is a remnant of the Old English genitive case suffix, it is now considered by syntacticians not to be a suffix but a clitic, although some linguists argue that it has properties of both.
Scandinavian languages
Old Norse was inflected, but modern Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish have lost much of their inflection. Grammatical case has largely died out with the exception of pronouns, just like English. However, adjectives, nouns, determiners and articles still have different forms according to grammatical number and grammatical gender. Danish and Swedish only inflect for two different genders while Norwegian has to some degree retained the feminine forms and inflects for three grammatical genders like Icelandic. However, in comparison to Icelandic, there are considerably fewer feminine forms left in the language.
In comparison, Icelandic preserves almost all of the inflections of Old Norse and remains heavily inflected. It retains all the grammatical cases from Old Norse and is inflected for number and three different grammatical genders. The dual number forms are however almost completely lost in comparison to Old Norse.
Unlike other Germanic languages, nouns are inflected for definiteness in all Scandinavian languages, like in the following case for Norwegian (nynorsk):
Singular | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
masculine | ein bil | bilen | bilar | bilane |
a car | the car | cars | the cars | |
feminine | ei vogn | vogna | vogner | vognene |
a wagon | the wagon | wagons | the wagons | |
neuter | eit hus | huset | hus | husa |
a house | the house | houses | the houses |
Singular | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
masculine | ein | -en | -ar | -ane |
feminine | ei | -a | -er | -ene |
neuter | eit | -et | - | -a |
Adjectives and participles are also inflected for definiteness in all Scandinavian languages like in Proto-Germanic.
Other Germanic languages
Modern German remains moderately inflected, retaining four noun cases, although the genitive started falling into disuse in all but formal writing in Early New High German. The case system of Dutch, simpler than that of German, is also simplified in common usage. Afrikaans, recognized as a distinct language in its own right rather than a Dutch dialect only in the early 20th century, has lost almost all inflection.
Latin and the Romance languages
The Romance languages, such as Spanish, Italian, French, Portuguese and especially – with its many cases – Romanian, have more overt inflection than English, especially in verb conjugation. Adjectives, nouns and articles are considerably less inflected than verbs, but they still have different forms according to number and grammatical gender.
Latin, the mother tongue of the Romance languages, was highly inflected; nouns and adjectives had different forms according to seven grammatical cases (including five major ones) with five major patterns of declension, and three genders instead of the two found in most Romance tongues. There were four patterns of conjugation in six tenses, three moods (indicative, subjunctive, imperative, plus the infinitive, participle, gerund, gerundive, and supine) and two voices (passive and active), all overtly expressed by affixes (passive voice forms were periphrastic in three tenses).
Baltic languages
The Baltic languages are highly inflected. Nouns and adjectives are declined in up to seven overt cases. Additional cases are defined in various covert ways. For example, an inessive case, an illative case, an adessive case and allative case are borrowed from Finnic. Latvian has only one overt locative case but it syncretizes the above four cases to the locative marking them by differences in the use of prepositions. Lithuanian breaks them out of the genitive case, accusative case and locative case by using different postpositions.
Dual form is obsolete in standard Latvian and nowadays it is also considered nearly obsolete in standard Lithuanian. For instance, in standard Lithuanian it is normal to say "dvi varnos (plural) – two crows" instead of "dvi varni (dual)". Adjectives, pronouns, and numerals are declined for number, gender, and case to agree with the noun they modify or for which they substitute. Baltic verbs are inflected for tense, mood, aspect, and voice. They agree with the subject in person and number (not in all forms in modern Latvian).
Slavic languages
All Slavic languages make use of a high degree of inflection, typically having six or seven cases and three genders for nouns and adjectives. However, the overt case system has disappeared almost completely in modern Bulgarian and Macedonian. Most verb tenses and moods are also formed by inflection (however, some are periphrastic, typically the future and conditional). Inflection is also present in adjective comparation and word derivation.
Declensional endings depend on case (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, locative, instrumental, vocative), number (singular, dual or plural), gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and animacy (animate vs inanimate). Unusual in other language families, declension in most Slavic languages also depends on whether the word is a noun or an adjective. Slovene and Sorbian languages use a rare third number, (in addition to singular and plural numbers) known as dual (in case of some words dual survived also in Polish and other Slavic languages). Modern Russian, Serbian and Czech also use a more complex form of dual, but this misnomer applies instead to numbers 2, 3, 4, and larger numbers ending in 2, 3, or 4 (with the exception of the teens, which are handled as plural; thus, 102 is dual, but 12 or 127 are not). In addition, in some Slavic languages, such as Polish, word stems are frequently modified by the addition or absence of endings, resulting in consonant and vowel alternation.
Arabic (fusional)
Modern Standard Arabic (also called Literary Arabic) is an inflected language. It uses a system of independent and suffix pronouns classified by person and number and verbal inflections marking person and number. Suffix pronouns are used as markers of possession and as objects of verbs and prepositions. The tatweel (ـــ) marks where the verb stem, verb form, noun, or preposition is placed.
Singular | Plural | Dual | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Independent Pronoun | Suffix Pronoun | Present Tense Affix | Independent Pronoun | Suffix Pronoun | Present Tense Affix | Independent Pronoun | Suffix Pronoun | Present Tense Affix | |||
Person | First | أَنَا ʾanā "I" | ـــِـي, ـــيَ, ـــنِي —ī, —ya, —nī | أ ʾ— | نَحْنُ naḥnu | ـــنَا —nā | نـــ n— | same as plural | |||
Second | masc. | أَنْتَ ʾanta "you" | ـــكَ —ka | تـــ t— | أَنْتُمْ ʾantum | ـــكُمْ —kum | تــــُونَ t—ūn | أَنْتُمَا ʾantumā | ـــكُمَا —kumā | تــــَانِ t—āni | |
fem. | أَنْتِ ʾanti "you" | ـــكِ —ki | تــــِينَ t—īna | أَنْتُنَّ ʾantunna | ـــكُنَّ —kunna | تــــْنَ t—na | |||||
Third | masc. | هُوَ huwa "he" | ـــهُ —hu | يـــ y— | هُمْ hum | ـــهُمْ —hum | يــــُونَ y—ūna | هُمَا humā | ـــهُمَا —humā | يــــَانِ y—āni | |
fem. | هِيَ hiya "she" | ـــهَا —hā | تـــ t— | هُنَّ hunna | ـــهُنَّ —hunna | تــــْنَ t—na |
Arabic regional dialects (e.g. Moroccan Arabic, Egyptian Arabic, Gulf Arabic), used for everyday communication, tend to have less inflection than the more formal Literary Arabic. For example, in Jordanian Arabic, the second- and third-person feminine plurals (أنتنّ antunna and هنّ hunna) and their respective unique conjugations are lost and replaced by the masculine (أنتم antum and هم hum), whereas in Lebanese and Syrian Arabic, هم hum is replaced by هنّ hunna.
In addition, the system known as ʾIʿrāb places vowel suffixes on each verb, noun, adjective, and adverb, according to its function within a sentence and its relation to surrounding words.
Uralic languages (agglutinative)
The Uralic languages are agglutinative, following from the agglutination in Proto-Uralic. The largest languages are Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian—all European Union official languages. Uralic inflection is, or is developed from, affixing. Grammatical markers directly added to the word perform the same function as prepositions in English. Almost all words are inflected according to their roles in the sentence: verbs, nouns, pronouns, numerals, adjectives, and some particles.
Hungarian and Finnish, in particular, often simply concatenate suffixes. For example, Finnish talossanikinko "in my house, too?" consists of talo-ssa-ni-kin-ko. However, in the Finnic languages (Finnish, Estonian etc.) and the Sami languages, there are processes which affect the root, particularly consonant gradation. The original suffixes may disappear (and appear only by liaison), leaving behind the modification of the root. This process is extensively developed in Estonian and Sami, and makes them also inflected, not only agglutinating languages. The Estonian illative case, for example, is expressed by a modified root: maja → majja (historical form *maja-han).
Altaic languages (agglutinative)
Though Altaic is widely considered to be a sprachbund by linguists, three language families united by a small subset of linguists as the Altaic language family—Turkic, Mongolic, and Manchu-Tungus—are agglutinative. The largest languages are Turkish, Azerbaijani and Uzbek—all Turkic languages. Altaic inflection is, or is developed from, affixing. Grammatical markers directly added to the word perform the same function as prepositions in English. Almost all words are inflected according to their roles in the sentence: verbs, nouns, pronouns, numerals, adjectives, and some particles.
Basque (agglutinative nominal inflection / fusional verb inflection)
Basque, a language isolate, is a highly inflected language, heavily inflecting both nouns and verbs.
Noun phrase morphology is agglutinative and consists of suffixes which simply attach to the end of a stem. These suffixes are in many cases fused with the article (-a for singular and -ak for plural), which in general is required to close a noun phrase in Basque if no other determiner is present, and unlike an article in many languages, it can only partially be correlated with the concept of definiteness. Proper nouns do not take an article, and indefinite nouns without the article (called mugagabe in Basque grammar) are highly restricted syntactically. Basque is an ergative language, meaning that inflectionally the single argument (subject) of an intransitive verb is marked in the same way as the direct object of a transitive verb. This is called the absolutive case and in Basque, as in most ergative languages, it is realized with a zero morph; in other words, it receives no special inflection. The subject of a transitive verb receives a special case suffix, called the ergative case.
There is no case marking concord in Basque and case suffixes, including those fused with the article, are added only to the last word in a noun phrase. Plurality is not marked on the noun and is identified only in the article or other determiner, possibly fused with a case marker. The examples below are in the absolutive case with zero case marking, and include the article only:
txakurr-a | (the/a) dog |
txakurr-ak | (the) dogs |
txakur polit-a | (the/a) pretty dog |
txakur polit-ak | (the) pretty dogs |
The noun phrase is declined for 11 cases: Absolutive, ergative, dative, possessive-genitive, benefactive, comitative, instrumental, inessive, allative, ablative, and local-genitive. These are signaled by suffixes that vary according to the categories of Singular, Plural, Indefinite, and Proper Noun, and many vary depending on whether the stem ends in a consonant or vowel. The Singular and Plural categories are fused with the article, and these endings are used when the noun phrase is not closed by any other determiner. This gives a potential 88 different forms, but the Indefinite and Proper Noun categories are identical in all but the local cases (inessive, allative, ablative, local-genitive), and many other variations in the endings can be accounted for by phonological rules operating to avoid impermissible consonant clusters. Local case endings are not normally added to animate Proper Nouns. The precise meaning of the local cases can be further specified by additional suffixes added after the local case suffixes.
Verb forms are extremely complex, agreeing with the subject, direct object, and indirect object; and include forms that agree with a "dative of interest" for intransitive verbs as well as allocutive forms where the verb form is altered if one is speaking to a close acquaintance. These allocutive forms also have different forms depending on whether the addressee is male or female. This is the only area in Basque grammar where gender plays any role at all. Subordination could also plausibly be considered an inflectional category of the Basque verb since subordination is signaled by prefixes and suffixes on the conjugated verb, further multiplying the number of potential forms.
Transitivity is a thoroughgoing division of Basque verbs, and it is necessary to know the transitivity of a particular verb in order to conjugate it successfully. In the spoken language only a handful of commonly used verbs are fully conjugated in the present and simple past, most verbs being conjugated by means of an auxiliary which differs according to transitivity. The literary language includes a few more such verbs, but the number is still very small. Even these few verbs require an auxiliary to conjugate other tenses besides the present and simple past.
The most common intransitive auxiliary is izan, which is also the verb for "to be". The most common transitive auxiliary is ukan, which is also the verb for "to have". (Other auxiliaries can be used in some of the tenses and may vary by dialect.) The compound tenses use an invariable form of the main verb (which appears in different forms according to the "tense group") and a conjugated form of the auxiliary. Pronouns are normally omitted if recoverable from the verb form. A couple of examples will have to suffice to demonstrate the complexity of the Basque verb:
Liburu-ak
Book-PL.the
saldu
sell
dizkiegu.
AUX.3PL/ABS.3PL/DAT.1PL/ERG
"We sold the books to them."
Kafe-a
Coffee-the
gusta-tzen
please-HAB
zaidak.
AUX.ALLOC/M.3SG/ABS.1SG/DAT
"I like coffee." ("Coffee pleases me.") (Used when speaking to a male friend.)
The morphs that represent the various tense/person/case/mood categories of Basque verbs, especially in the auxiliaries, are so highly fused that segmenting them into individual meaningful units is nearly impossible, if not pointless. Considering the multitude of forms that a particular Basque verb can take, it seems unlikely that an individual speaker would have an opportunity to utter them all in his or her lifetime.
Mainland Southeast Asian languages (isolating)
Most languages in the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area (such as the varieties of Chinese, Vietnamese, and Thai) are not overtly inflected, or show very little overt inflection, and are therefore considered analytic languages (also known as isolating languages).
Chinese
Standard Chinese does not possess overt inflectional morphology. While some languages indicate grammatical relations with inflectional morphemes, Chinese utilizes word order and particles. Consider the following examples:
- Latin:
- Puer puellam videt.
- Puellam puer videt.
Both sentences mean 'The boy sees the girl.' This is because puer (boy) is singular nominative, puellam (girl) is singular accusative. Since the roles of puer and puellam have been marked with case endings, the change in position does not matter.
- Modern Standard Chinese:
- 我给了他一本书 (wǒ gěile tā yī běn shū) 'I gave him a book'
- 他给了我一本书 (tā gěile wǒ yī běn shū) 'He gave me a book'
The situation is very different in Chinese. Since Modern Chinese makes no use of inflection, the meanings of wǒ ('I' or 'me') and tā ('he' or 'him') shall be determined with their position.
In Classical Chinese, pronouns were overtly inflected to mark case. However, these overt case forms are no longer used; most of the alternative pronouns are considered archaic in modern Mandarin Chinese. Classically, 我 (wǒ) was used solely as the first person accusative. 吾 (Wú) was generally used as the first person nominative.
Certain varieties of Chinese are known to express meaning by means of tone change, although further investigations are required[dubious – discuss]. Note that the tone change must be distinguished from tone sandhi. Tone sandhi is a compulsory change that occurs when certain tones are juxtaposed. Tone change, however, is a morphologically conditioned alternation and is used as an inflectional or a derivational strategy. Examples from Taishan and Zhongshan (both Yue dialects spoken in Guangdong Province) are shown below:
- Taishan
ngwoi33 | ‘I’ (singular) |
ngwoi22 | ‘we’ (plural) |
- Zhongshan
hy22 | ‘go’ |
hy35 | ‘gone’ (perfective) |
The following table compares the personal pronouns of Sixian dialect (a dialect of Taiwanese Hakka) with Zaiwa and Jingpho (both Tibeto-Burman languages spoken in Yunnan and Burma). The superscripted numbers indicate the Chao tone numerals.
Sixian | Zaiwa | Jingpho | |
---|---|---|---|
1 Nom | ŋai11 | ŋo51 | ŋai33 |
1 Gen | ŋa24 or ŋai11 ke55 | ŋa55 | ŋjeʔ55 |
1 Acc | ŋai11 | ŋo31 | ŋai33 |
2 Nom | ŋ̍11 | naŋ51 | naŋ33 |
2 Gen | ŋia24 or ŋ̍11 ke55 | naŋ55 | naʔ55 |
2 Acc | ŋ̍11 | naŋ31 | naŋ33 |
3 Nom | ki11 | jaŋ31 | khji33 |
3 Gen | kia24 or ki11 ke55 | jaŋ51 | khjiʔ55 |
3 Acc | ki11 | jaŋ31 | khji33 |
In Shanghainese, the third-person singular pronoun is overtly inflected as to case and the first- and second-person singular pronouns exhibit a change in tone depending on case.[citation needed]
Japanese (agglutinative)
Japanese shows a high degree of overt inflection of verbs, less so of adjectives, and very little of nouns, but it is mostly strictly agglutinative and extremely regular. Fusion of morphemes also happen in colloquial speech, for example: the causative-passive 〜せられ〜 (-serare-) fuses into 〜され〜 (-sare-), as in 行かされる (ikasareru, "is made to go"), and the non-past progressive 〜ている (-teiru) fuses into 〜てる (-teru) as in 食べてる (tabeteru, "is eating"). Formally, every noun phrase must be marked for case, but this is done by invariable particles (clitic postpositions). (Many[citation needed] grammarians consider Japanese particles to be separate words, and therefore not an inflection, while others[citation needed] consider agglutination a type of overt inflection, and therefore consider Japanese nouns as overtly inflected.)
Auxiliary languages
Some auxiliary languages, such as Lingua Franca Nova, Glosa, and Frater, have no inflection. Other auxiliary languages, such as Esperanto, Ido, and Interlingua have comparatively simple inflectional systems.
Esperanto
In Esperanto, an agglutinative language, nouns and adjectives are inflected for case (nominative, accusative) and number (singular, plural), according to a simple paradigm without irregularities. Verbs are not inflected for person or number, but they are inflected for tense (past, present, future) and mood (indicative, infinitive, conditional, jussive). They also form active and passive participles, which may be past, present or future. All verbs are regular.
Ido
Ido has a different form for each verbal tense (past, present, future, volitive and imperative) plus an infinitive, and both a present and past participle. There are though no verbal inflections for person or number, and all verbs are regular.
Nouns are marked for number (singular and plural), and the accusative case may be shown in certain situations, typically when the direct object of a sentence precedes its verb. On the other hand, adjectives are unmarked for gender, number or case (unless they stand on their own, without a noun, in which case they take on the same desinences as the missing noun would have taken). The definite article "la" ("the") remains unaltered regardless of gender or case, and also of number, except when there is no other word to show plurality. Pronouns are identical in all cases, though exceptionally the accusative case may be marked, as for nouns.
Interlingua
Interlingua, in contrast with the Romance languages, has almost no irregular verb conjugations, and its verb forms are the same for all persons and numbers. It does, however, have compound verb tenses similar to those in the Romance, Germanic, and Slavic languages: ille ha vivite, "he has lived"; illa habeva vivite, "she had lived". Nouns are inflected by number, taking a plural -s, but rarely by gender: only when referring to a male or female being. Interlingua has no noun-adjective agreement by gender, number, or case. As a result, adjectives ordinarily have no inflections. They may take the plural form if they are being used in place of a noun: le povres, "the poor".
See also
Notes
Citations
Footnotes
- Crystal, David. (2008). A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics (6th ed., pp. 243–244). Malden, MA: Blackwell.
- Owens, Jonathan (1998). "Case and proto-Arabic, Part I". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 61: 51–73. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00015755. S2CID 204970487.
- Brinton, Laurel J. (2000). The Structure of Modern English: A Linguistic Introduction. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: John Benjamins. p. 104. ISBN 9781556196621.
- "Section 4: Inflectional Morphemes". Analyzing Grammar in Context. University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Retrieved 11 March 2024.
- "Derivation and Inflection" (PDF). Retrieved 11 March 2024 – via websites.umich.edu/~jlawler.
- Anderson, Stephen R. (1985), "Inflectional Morphology", in Shopen, Timothy (ed.), Language typology and syntactic description, Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 162–164
- Nadarajan, S. (2006). "A Crosslinguistic study of Reduplication". The Arizona Working Papers in Second Language Acquisition and Teaching. 13: 39–53.
- Xu, D. (2012). "Reduplication in languages: A case study of languages of China". Plurality and classifiers across languages in China. Berlin, Germany: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 43–66.
- Hsu, S.-C. (2008). "The Structure Analysis and Tone Sandhi of Reduplicative Adjectives in Taiwanese". Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences of NHCUE. 1 (1): 27–48.
- Rubino, C. (2005). Reduplication: Form, function and distribution. In B. Hurch (Ed.). Studies on Reduplication (pp. 11–29). Berlin, Germany: Mouton de Gruyter.
- Reid, L. A. (2009). "On the diachronic development of C1V1 reduplication in some Austronesian languages". Morphology. 19 (2): 239. doi:10.1007/s11525-009-9142-9. hdl:10125/33040. S2CID 40795368.
- Palancar, Enrique L. & Léonard, Jean-Léo. (2014). Tone and inflection: An introduction. In Enrique L. Palancar & Jean-Léo Léonard (Eds.), Tone and Inflection: New facts under new perspectives. HAL 01099327
- Feist, Timothy & Enrique L. Palancar. (2015). Oto-Manguean Inflectional Class Database: Tlatepuzco Chinantec. University of Surrey. doi:10.15126/SMG.28/1.01
- Hyman, L. M. (2016). "Morphological tonal assignments in conflict: Who wins?". In Palancar, E. L.; Léonard, J. L. (eds.). Tone and Inflection: New Facts and New Perspectives. Berlin, Germany: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 15–39.
- Lyons, C. (1986). The Syntax of English Genitive Constructions. Journal of Linguistics, 22(1), 123–143.
- Lowe, J.J. Nat Lang Linguist Theory (2016) 34: 157. doi:10.1007/s11049-015-9300-1
- Dahl, Östen; Koptjevskaja-Tamm, Maria (2001). The Circum-Baltic Languages: Grammar and typology. Vol. 2: Grammar and Typology. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: John Benjamins. p. 672.
- Hewson, John; Bubeník, Vít (2006). From case to adposition : the development of configurational syntax in Indo-European languages. Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science, Volume 4. Amsterdam: Benjamins. p. 206.
- Ryding, Karin C. (2005). A Reference Grammar of Modern Standard Arabic.
- King, Alan R. The Basque Language: A Practical Introduction. University of Nevada Press. Reno, Nevada
- Manandise, Esméralda. "Evidence from Basque for a New Theory of Grammar", doctoral dissertation in Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics: A Garland Series, Jorge Hankamer, general ed. Garland Publishing, Inc. New York & London.
- Manandise, Esméralda. "Evidence from Basque for a New Theory of Grammar", doctoral dissertation in Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics: A Garland Series, Jorge Hankamer, general ed. Garland Publishing, Inc. New York & London.
- Norman, Jerry. (1988). Chinese (p. 98). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Chen, M. Y. (2000). Tone Sandhi: Patterns across Chinese dialects. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
- Lai, W.-Y. (2010). "The Source of Hakka Personal Pronoun and Genitive with the Viewpoint of Diminutive". Journal of Taiwanese Languages and Literature. 5 (1): 53–80.
- Sun, H.-K. (1996). "Case markers of personal pronouns in Tibeto-Burman languages". Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area. 19 (2): 1–15. doi:10.32655/LTBA.19.2.01.
References
- Agirre, E.; et al. (1992), "XUXEN: A spelling checker/corrector for Basque based on two-level morphology", Proceedings of the Third Conference of Applied Natural Language Processing (PDF), pp. 119–125, archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2005
- Bubeník, Vit. (1999). An introduction to the study of morphology. LINCOM coursebooks in linguistics, 07. Munich: LINCOM Europa. ISBN 3-89586-570-2.
- Norman, Jerry (1988). Chinese. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-29653-6. (pbk).
Further reading
- Bauer, Laurie (2003). Introducing linguistic morphology (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. ISBN 0-87840-343-4.
- Haspelmath, Martin (2002). Understanding morphology. London: Arnold, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-340-76025-7. (hb); (pbk).
- Katamba, Francis (1993). Morphology. Modern linguistics series. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-10101-5. (hb); (pbk).
- Matthews, Peter (1991). Morphology (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-41043-6. (hb); (pbk).
- Nichols, Johanna (1986). "Head-marking and dependent-marking grammar". Language. 62 (1): 56–119. doi:10.1353/lan.1986.0014. S2CID 144574879.
- De Reuse, Willem J. (1996). A practical grammar of the San Carlos Apache language. LINCOM Studies in Native American Linguistics 51. LINCOM. ISBN 3-89586-861-2.
- Spencer, Andrew; Zwicky, Arnold M., eds. (1998). The handbook of morphology. Blackwell handbooks in linguistics. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-18544-5.
- Stump, Gregory T. (2001). Inflectional morphology: A theory of paradigm structure. Cambridge studies in linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-78047-0.
- Van Valin, Robert D. Jr. (2001). An introduction to syntax. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-63566-7. (pbk); (hb).
External links
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODVMems1TDFkcGEzUnBiMjVoY25rdGJHOW5ieTFsYmkxMk1pNXpkbWN2TkRCd2VDMVhhV3QwYVc5dVlYSjVMV3h2WjI4dFpXNHRkakl1YzNabkxuQnVadz09LnBuZw==.png)
SIL articles
- SIL: What is inflection?
- SIL: What is an inflectional affix?
- SIL: What is an inflectional category?
- SIL: What is a morphological process?
- SIL: What is derivation?
- SIL: Comparison of inflection and derivation
- SIL: What is an agglutinative language?
- SIL: What is a fusional language?
- SIL: What is an isolating language?
- SIL: What is a polysynthetic language?
Lexicon of Linguistics articles
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Agglutinating Language, Fusional Morphology, Isolating Language, Polysynthetic Language
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Inflection, Derivation
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Conjugation, Declension
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Base, Stem, Root
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Defective Paradigm
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Strong Verb
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Inflection Phrase (IP), INFL, AGR, Tense
- Lexicon of Linguistics: Lexicalist Hypothesis
This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message In linguistic morphology inflection less commonly inflexion is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense case voice aspect person number gender mood animacy and definiteness The inflection of verbs is called conjugation while the inflection of nouns adjectives adverbs etc can be called declension Inflection of the Scottish Gaelic lexeme for dog which is cu for singular chu for dual with the number da two and coin for plural An inflection expresses grammatical categories with affixation such as prefix suffix infix circumfix and transfix apophony as Indo European ablaut or other modifications For example the Latin verb ducam meaning I will lead includes the suffix am expressing person first number singular and tense mood future indicative or present subjunctive The use of this suffix is an inflection In contrast in the English clause I will lead the word lead is not inflected for any of person number or tense it is simply the bare form of a verb The inflected form of a word often contains both one or more free morphemes a unit of meaning which can stand by itself as a word and one or more bound morphemes a unit of meaning which cannot stand alone as a word For example the English word cars is a noun that is inflected for number specifically to express the plural the content morpheme car is unbound because it could stand alone as a word while the suffix s is bound because it cannot stand alone as a word These two morphemes together form the inflected word cars Words that are never subject to inflection are said to be invariant for example the English verb must is an invariant item it never takes a suffix or changes form to signify a different grammatical category Its categories can be determined only from its context Languages that seldom make use of inflection such as English are said to be analytic Analytic languages that do not make use of derivational morphemes such as Standard Chinese are said to be isolating Requiring the forms or inflections of more than one word in a sentence to be compatible with each other according to the rules of the language is known as concord or agreement For example in the man jumps man is a singular noun so jump is constrained in the present tense to use the third person singular suffix s Languages that have some degree of inflection are synthetic languages They can be highly inflected such as Georgian or Kichwa moderately inflected such as Russian or Latin weakly inflected such as English but not uninflected such as Chinese Languages that are so inflected that a sentence can consist of a single highly inflected word such as many Native American languages are called polysynthetic languages Languages in which each inflection conveys only a single grammatical category such as Finnish are known as agglutinative languages while languages in which a single inflection can convey multiple grammatical roles such as both nominative case and plural as in Latin and German are called fusional Examples in EnglishIn English most nouns are inflected for number with the inflectional plural affix s as in dog dog s and most English verbs are inflected for tense with the inflectional past tense affix ed as in call call ed English also inflects verbs by affixation to mark the third person singular in the present tense with s and the present participle with ing English short adjectives are inflected to mark comparative and superlative forms with er and est respectively There are eight regular inflectional affixes in the English language Inflectional affixes in English Affix Grammatical category Mark Part of speech s Number plural nouns s s Case genitive nouns and noun phrases pronouns marks independent genitive ing Aspect progressive gerunds or participles en ed Aspect perfect verbs ed t Tense past simple verbs s Person number aspect tense 3rd person singular present indicative verbs er Degree of comparison comparative adjectives and adverbs est Degree of comparison superlative adjectives and adverbs Despite the march toward regularization modern English retains traces of its ancestry with a minority of its words still using inflection by ablaut sound change mostly in verbs and umlaut a particular type of sound change mostly in nouns as well as long short vowel alternation For example Write wrote written marking by ablaut variation and also suffixing in the participle Sing sang sung ablaut Foot feet marking by umlaut variation Mouse mice umlaut Child children ablaut and also suffixing in the plural For details see English plural English verbs and English irregular verbs Regular and irregular inflectionWhen a given word class is subject to inflection in a particular language there are generally one or more standard patterns of inflection the paradigms described below that words in that class may follow Words which follow such a standard pattern are said to be regular those that inflect differently are called irregular For instance many languages that feature verb inflection have both regular verbs and irregular verbs In English regular verbs form their past tense and past participle with the ending e d Therefore verbs like play arrive and enter are regular while verbs like sing keep and go are irregular Irregular verbs often preserve patterns that were regular in past forms of the language but which have now become anomalous in rare cases there are regular verbs that were irregular in past forms of the language For more details see English verbs and English irregular verbs Other types of irregular inflected form include irregular plural nouns such as the English mice children and women see English plural and the French yeux the plural of œil eye and irregular comparative and superlative forms of adjectives or adverbs such as the English better and best which correspond to the positive form good or well Irregularities can have four basic causes citation needed euphony Regular inflection would result in forms that sound esthetically unpleasing or are difficult to pronounce English far farther or further Spanish tener tengo tendre vs comer como comere Portuguese vs Spanish andar Portuguese andaram vs Spanish anduvieron principal parts These are generally considered to have been formed independently of one another so the student must memorize them when learning a new word Example Latin dicō dicere dixi dictum Spanish digo decir dije dicho strong vs weak inflection In some cases two inflection systems exist conventionally classified as strong and weak For instance English and German have weak verbs that form the past tense and past participle by adding an ending English jump jumped German machen machte and strong verbs that change vowel and in some cases form the past participle by adding en English swim swam swum German schwimmen schwamm geschwommen Ancient Greek verbs are likewise said to have had a first aorist ἔlῡsa and a second aorist ἔlipon suppletion The irregular form was originally derived from a different root English person people The comparative and superlative forms of good in many languages display this phenomenon e g eng good better best For more details on some of the considerations that apply to regularly and irregularly inflected forms see the article on regular and irregular verbs Declension and conjugationTwo traditional grammatical terms refer to inflections of specific word classes Inflecting a noun pronoun adjective adverb article or determiner is known as declining it The forms may express number case gender or degree of comparison Inflecting a verb is called conjugating it The forms may express tense mood voice aspect person or number 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 Below is the declension of the English pronoun I which is inflected for case and number singular pluralnominative I weoblique me uspossessive determiner my ourpossessive pronoun mine oursreflexive myself ourselves The pronoun who is also inflected according to case Its declension is defective in the sense that it lacks a reflexive form singular and pluralnominative whooblique whom traditional who informal possessive whosereflexive The following table shows the conjugation of the verb to arrive in the indicative mood suffixes inflect it for person number and tense Tense I you he she it we you theyPresent arrive arrive arrives arrive arrive arrivePast arrived arrived arrived arrived arrived arrived The non finite forms arrive bare infinitive arrived past participle and arriving gerund present participle although not inflected for person or number can also be regarded as part of the conjugation of the verb to arrive Compound verb forms such as I have arrived I had arrived or I will arrive can be included also in the conjugation of the verb for didactic purposes but they are not overt inflections of arrive The formula for deriving the covert form in which the relevant inflections do not occur in the main verb is pronoun conjugated auxiliary verb non finite form of main verb Inflectional paradigm An inflectional paradigm refers to a pattern usually a set of inflectional endings where a class of words follow the same pattern Nominal inflectional paradigms are called declensions and verbal inflectional paradigms are termed conjugations For instance there are five types of Latin declension Words that belong to the first declension usually end in a and are usually feminine These words share a common inflectional framework In Old English nouns are divided into two major categories of declension the strong and weak ones as shown below gender and numberMasculine Neuter FeminineSingular Plural Singular Plural Singular Pluralcase Strong noun declensionengel angel scip ship sorg sorrow Nominative engel englas scip scipu sorg sorgaAccusative engel englas scip scipu sorge sorga sorgeGenitive engles engla scipes scipa sorge sorgaDative engle englum scipe scipum sorge sorgumcase Weak noun declensionnama name eage eye tunge tongue Nominative nama naman eage eagan tunge tunganAccusative naman naman eage eagan tungan tunganGenitive naman namena eagan eagena tungan tungenaDative naman namum eagan eagum tungan tungum The terms strong declension and weak declension are primarily relevant to well known dependent marking languages citation needed such as the Indo European languages citation needed or Japanese In dependent marking languages nouns in adpositional prepositional or postpositional phrases can carry inflectional morphemes In head marking languages the adpositions can carry the inflection in adpositional phrases This means that these languages will have inflected adpositions In Western Apache San Carlos dialect the postposition ka on is inflected for person and number with prefixes Singular Dual Plural1st shi ka on me noh ka on us two da noh ka on us 2nd ni ka on you nohwi ka on you two da nohwi ka on you all 3rd bi ka on him da bi ka on them Traditional grammars have specific terms for inflections of nouns and verbs but not for those of adpositions clarification needed Compared to derivationInflection is the process of adding inflectional morphemes that modify a verb s tense mood aspect voice person or number or a noun s case gender or number rarely affecting the word s meaning or class Examples of applying inflectional morphemes to words are adding s to the root dog to form dogs and adding ed to wait to form waited In contrast derivation is the process of adding derivational morphemes which create a new word from existing words and change the semantic meaning or the part of speech of the affected word such as by changing a noun to a verb Distinctions between verbal moods are mainly indicated by derivational morphemes Words are rarely listed in dictionaries on the basis of their inflectional morphemes in which case they would be lexical items However they often are listed on the basis of their derivational morphemes For instance English dictionaries list readable and readability words with derivational suffixes along with their root read However no traditional English dictionary lists book as one entry and books as a separate entry the same goes for jump and jumped Inflectional morphologyLanguages that add inflectional morphemes to words are sometimes called inflectional languages which is a synonym for inflected languages Morphemes may be added in several different ways Affixation or simply adding morphemes onto the word without changing the root Reduplication repeating all or part of a word to change its meaning Alternation exchanging one sound for another in the root usually vowel sounds as in the ablaut process found in Germanic strong verbs and the umlaut often found in nouns among others Suprasegmental variations such as of stress pitch or tone where no sounds are added or changed but the intonation and relative strength of each sound is altered regularly For an example see Initial stress derived noun Inflection through reduplication Reduplication is a morphological process where a constituent is repeated The direct repetition of a word or root is called total reduplication or full reduplication The repetition of a segment is referred to as partial reduplication Reduplication can serve both derivational and inflectional functions A few examples are given below Inflectional Reduplication Value Language Original ReduplicatedPlurality Indonesian buku book buku buku books Distribution Standard Chinese ren24 person ren24 ren24 everyone Intensity Taiwanese Hokkien ang24 red ang24 ang24 reddish Imperfective Ilokano ag basa read ag basbasa reading Inchoative Nukuoro gohu dark gohu gohu getting dark Progressive Pazeh language bazu wash baabazu be washing Inflection through tone change Palancar and Leonard provided an example with Tlatepuzco Chinantec an Oto Manguean language spoken in Southern Mexico where tones are able to distinguish mood person and number Verb paradigm of bend in Tlatepuzco Chinantec 1 SG 1 PL 2 3Completive huʔ1 huʔ13 huʔ1 huʔ2Incompletive huʔ12 huʔ12 huʔ12 huʔ2Irrealis huʔ13 huʔ13 huʔ13 huʔ2 Case can be distinguished with tone as well as in Maasai language a Nilo Saharan language spoken in Kenya and Tanzania Hyman 2016 Case Inflection in Maasai gloss Nominative Accusative head elʊ kʊ nya elʊ kʊ nya rat enderoni enderoniIn various languagesIndo European languages fusional Because the Proto Indo European language was highly inflected all of its descendant Indo European languages such as Albanian Armenian English German Ukrainian Russian Persian Kurdish Italian Irish Spanish French Hindi Marathi Urdu Bengali and Nepali are inflected to a greater or lesser extent In general older Indo European languages such as Latin Ancient Greek Old English Old Norse Old Church Slavonic and Sanskrit are extensively inflected because of their temporal proximity to Proto Indo European Deflexion has caused modern versions of some Indo European languages that were previously highly inflected to be much less so an example is Modern English as compared to Old English In general languages where deflexion occurs replace inflectional complexity with more rigorous word order which provides the lost inflectional details Most Slavic languages and some Indo Aryan languages are an exception to the general Indo European deflexion trend continuing to be highly inflected in some cases acquiring additional inflectional complexity and grammatical genders as in Czech amp Marathi English Old English was a moderately inflected language using an extensive case system similar to that of modern Icelandic Faroese or German Middle and Modern English lost progressively more of the Old English inflectional system Modern English is considered a weakly inflected language since its nouns have only vestiges of inflection plurals the pronouns and its regular verbs have only four forms an inflected form for the past indicative and subjunctive looked an inflected form for the third person singular present indicative looks an inflected form for the present participle looking and an uninflected form for everything else look While the English possessive indicator s as in Jennifer s book is a remnant of the Old English genitive case suffix it is now considered by syntacticians not to be a suffix but a clitic although some linguists argue that it has properties of both Scandinavian languages Old Norse was inflected but modern Swedish Norwegian and Danish have lost much of their inflection Grammatical case has largely died out with the exception of pronouns just like English However adjectives nouns determiners and articles still have different forms according to grammatical number and grammatical gender Danish and Swedish only inflect for two different genders while Norwegian has to some degree retained the feminine forms and inflects for three grammatical genders like Icelandic However in comparison to Icelandic there are considerably fewer feminine forms left in the language In comparison Icelandic preserves almost all of the inflections of Old Norse and remains heavily inflected It retains all the grammatical cases from Old Norse and is inflected for number and three different grammatical genders The dual number forms are however almost completely lost in comparison to Old Norse Unlike other Germanic languages nouns are inflected for definiteness in all Scandinavian languages like in the following case for Norwegian nynorsk Inflection of nouns in Norwegian nynorsk Singular PluralIndefinite Definite Indefinite Definitemasculine ein bil bilen bilar bilanea car the car cars the carsfeminine ei vogn vogna vogner vognenea wagon the wagon wagons the wagonsneuter eit hus huset hus husaa house the house houses the housesArticles in Norwegian nynorsk Singular PluralIndefinite Definite Indefinite Definitemasculine ein en ar anefeminine ei a er eneneuter eit et a Adjectives and participles are also inflected for definiteness in all Scandinavian languages like in Proto Germanic Other Germanic languages Modern German remains moderately inflected retaining four noun cases although the genitive started falling into disuse in all but formal writing in Early New High German The case system of Dutch simpler than that of German is also simplified in common usage Afrikaans recognized as a distinct language in its own right rather than a Dutch dialect only in the early 20th century has lost almost all inflection Latin and the Romance languages The Romance languages such as Spanish Italian French Portuguese and especially with its many cases Romanian have more overt inflection than English especially in verb conjugation Adjectives nouns and articles are considerably less inflected than verbs but they still have different forms according to number and grammatical gender Latin the mother tongue of the Romance languages was highly inflected nouns and adjectives had different forms according to seven grammatical cases including five major ones with five major patterns of declension and three genders instead of the two found in most Romance tongues There were four patterns of conjugation in six tenses three moods indicative subjunctive imperative plus the infinitive participle gerund gerundive and supine and two voices passive and active all overtly expressed by affixes passive voice forms were periphrastic in three tenses Baltic languages The Baltic languages are highly inflected Nouns and adjectives are declined in up to seven overt cases Additional cases are defined in various covert ways For example an inessive case an illative case an adessive case and allative case are borrowed from Finnic Latvian has only one overt locative case but it syncretizes the above four cases to the locative marking them by differences in the use of prepositions Lithuanian breaks them out of the genitive case accusative case and locative case by using different postpositions Dual form is obsolete in standard Latvian and nowadays it is also considered nearly obsolete in standard Lithuanian For instance in standard Lithuanian it is normal to say dvi varnos plural two crows instead of dvi varni dual Adjectives pronouns and numerals are declined for number gender and case to agree with the noun they modify or for which they substitute Baltic verbs are inflected for tense mood aspect and voice They agree with the subject in person and number not in all forms in modern Latvian Slavic languages All Slavic languages make use of a high degree of inflection typically having six or seven cases and three genders for nouns and adjectives However the overt case system has disappeared almost completely in modern Bulgarian and Macedonian Most verb tenses and moods are also formed by inflection however some are periphrastic typically the future and conditional Inflection is also present in adjective comparation and word derivation Declensional endings depend on case nominative genitive dative accusative locative instrumental vocative number singular dual or plural gender masculine feminine neuter and animacy animate vs inanimate Unusual in other language families declension in most Slavic languages also depends on whether the word is a noun or an adjective Slovene and Sorbian languages use a rare third number in addition to singular and plural numbers known as dual in case of some words dual survived also in Polish and other Slavic languages Modern Russian Serbian and Czech also use a more complex form of dual but this misnomer applies instead to numbers 2 3 4 and larger numbers ending in 2 3 or 4 with the exception of the teens which are handled as plural thus 102 is dual but 12 or 127 are not In addition in some Slavic languages such as Polish word stems are frequently modified by the addition or absence of endings resulting in consonant and vowel alternation Arabic fusional Modern Standard Arabic also called Literary Arabic is an inflected language It uses a system of independent and suffix pronouns classified by person and number and verbal inflections marking person and number Suffix pronouns are used as markers of possession and as objects of verbs and prepositions The tatweel ـــ marks where the verb stem verb form noun or preposition is placed Singular Plural DualIndependent Pronoun Suffix Pronoun Present Tense Affix Independent Pronoun Suffix Pronoun Present Tense Affix Independent Pronoun Suffix Pronoun Present Tense AffixPerson First أ ن ا ʾana I ـــ ـي ـــي ـــن ي i ya ni أ ʾ ن ح ن naḥnu ـــن ا na نـــ n same as pluralSecond masc أ ن ت ʾanta you ـــك ka تـــ t أ ن ت م ʾantum ـــك م kum تــــ ون t un أ ن ت م ا ʾantuma ـــك م ا kuma تــــ ان t anifem أ ن ت ʾanti you ـــك ki تــــ ين t ina أ ن ت ن ʾantunna ـــك ن kunna تــــ ن t naThird masc ه و huwa he ـــه hu يـــ y ه م hum ـــه م hum يــــ ون y una ه م ا huma ـــه م ا huma يــــ ان y anifem ه ي hiya she ـــه ا ha تـــ t ه ن hunna ـــه ن hunna تــــ ن t na Arabic regional dialects e g Moroccan Arabic Egyptian Arabic Gulf Arabic used for everyday communication tend to have less inflection than the more formal Literary Arabic For example in Jordanian Arabic the second and third person feminine plurals أنتن antunna and هن hunna and their respective unique conjugations are lost and replaced by the masculine أنتم antum and هم hum whereas in Lebanese and Syrian Arabic هم hum is replaced by هن hunna In addition the system known as ʾIʿrab places vowel suffixes on each verb noun adjective and adverb according to its function within a sentence and its relation to surrounding words Uralic languages agglutinative The Uralic languages are agglutinative following from the agglutination in Proto Uralic The largest languages are Hungarian Finnish and Estonian all European Union official languages Uralic inflection is or is developed from affixing Grammatical markers directly added to the word perform the same function as prepositions in English Almost all words are inflected according to their roles in the sentence verbs nouns pronouns numerals adjectives and some particles Hungarian and Finnish in particular often simply concatenate suffixes For example Finnish talossanikinko in my house too consists of talo ssa ni kin ko However in the Finnic languages Finnish Estonian etc and the Sami languages there are processes which affect the root particularly consonant gradation The original suffixes may disappear and appear only by liaison leaving behind the modification of the root This process is extensively developed in Estonian and Sami and makes them also inflected not only agglutinating languages The Estonian illative case for example is expressed by a modified root maja majja historical form maja han Altaic languages agglutinative Though Altaic is widely considered to be a sprachbund by linguists three language families united by a small subset of linguists as the Altaic language family Turkic Mongolic and Manchu Tungus are agglutinative The largest languages are Turkish Azerbaijani and Uzbek all Turkic languages Altaic inflection is or is developed from affixing Grammatical markers directly added to the word perform the same function as prepositions in English Almost all words are inflected according to their roles in the sentence verbs nouns pronouns numerals adjectives and some particles Basque agglutinative nominal inflection fusional verb inflection Basque a language isolate is a highly inflected language heavily inflecting both nouns and verbs Noun phrase morphology is agglutinative and consists of suffixes which simply attach to the end of a stem These suffixes are in many cases fused with the article a for singular and ak for plural which in general is required to close a noun phrase in Basque if no other determiner is present and unlike an article in many languages it can only partially be correlated with the concept of definiteness Proper nouns do not take an article and indefinite nouns without the article called mugagabe in Basque grammar are highly restricted syntactically Basque is an ergative language meaning that inflectionally the single argument subject of an intransitive verb is marked in the same way as the direct object of a transitive verb This is called the absolutive case and in Basque as in most ergative languages it is realized with a zero morph in other words it receives no special inflection The subject of a transitive verb receives a special case suffix called the ergative case There is no case marking concord in Basque and case suffixes including those fused with the article are added only to the last word in a noun phrase Plurality is not marked on the noun and is identified only in the article or other determiner possibly fused with a case marker The examples below are in the absolutive case with zero case marking and include the article only txakurr a the a dogtxakurr ak the dogstxakur polit a the a pretty dogtxakur polit ak the pretty dogs The noun phrase is declined for 11 cases Absolutive ergative dative possessive genitive benefactive comitative instrumental inessive allative ablative and local genitive These are signaled by suffixes that vary according to the categories of Singular Plural Indefinite and Proper Noun and many vary depending on whether the stem ends in a consonant or vowel The Singular and Plural categories are fused with the article and these endings are used when the noun phrase is not closed by any other determiner This gives a potential 88 different forms but the Indefinite and Proper Noun categories are identical in all but the local cases inessive allative ablative local genitive and many other variations in the endings can be accounted for by phonological rules operating to avoid impermissible consonant clusters Local case endings are not normally added to animate Proper Nouns The precise meaning of the local cases can be further specified by additional suffixes added after the local case suffixes Verb forms are extremely complex agreeing with the subject direct object and indirect object and include forms that agree with a dative of interest for intransitive verbs as well as allocutive forms where the verb form is altered if one is speaking to a close acquaintance These allocutive forms also have different forms depending on whether the addressee is male or female This is the only area in Basque grammar where gender plays any role at all Subordination could also plausibly be considered an inflectional category of the Basque verb since subordination is signaled by prefixes and suffixes on the conjugated verb further multiplying the number of potential forms Transitivity is a thoroughgoing division of Basque verbs and it is necessary to know the transitivity of a particular verb in order to conjugate it successfully In the spoken language only a handful of commonly used verbs are fully conjugated in the present and simple past most verbs being conjugated by means of an auxiliary which differs according to transitivity The literary language includes a few more such verbs but the number is still very small Even these few verbs require an auxiliary to conjugate other tenses besides the present and simple past The most common intransitive auxiliary is izan which is also the verb for to be The most common transitive auxiliary is ukan which is also the verb for to have Other auxiliaries can be used in some of the tenses and may vary by dialect The compound tenses use an invariable form of the main verb which appears in different forms according to the tense group and a conjugated form of the auxiliary Pronouns are normally omitted if recoverable from the verb form A couple of examples will have to suffice to demonstrate the complexity of the Basque verb Liburu ak Book PL thesaldu selldizkiegu AUX 3PL ABS 3PL DAT 1PL ERG Liburu ak saldu dizkiegu Book PL the sell AUX 3PL ABS 3PL DAT 1PL ERG We sold the books to them Kafe a Coffee thegusta tzen please HABzaidak AUX ALLOC M 3SG ABS 1SG DAT Kafe a gusta tzen zaidak Coffee the please HAB AUX ALLOC M 3SG ABS 1SG DAT I like coffee Coffee pleases me Used when speaking to a male friend The morphs that represent the various tense person case mood categories of Basque verbs especially in the auxiliaries are so highly fused that segmenting them into individual meaningful units is nearly impossible if not pointless Considering the multitude of forms that a particular Basque verb can take it seems unlikely that an individual speaker would have an opportunity to utter them all in his or her lifetime Mainland Southeast Asian languages isolating Most languages in the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area such as the varieties of Chinese Vietnamese and Thai are not overtly inflected or show very little overt inflection and are therefore considered analytic languages also known as isolating languages Chinese Standard Chinese does not possess overt inflectional morphology While some languages indicate grammatical relations with inflectional morphemes Chinese utilizes word order and particles Consider the following examples Latin Puer puellam videt Puellam puer videt Both sentences mean The boy sees the girl This is because puer boy is singular nominative puellam girl is singular accusative Since the roles of puer and puellam have been marked with case endings the change in position does not matter Modern Standard Chinese 我给了他一本书 wǒ geile ta yi ben shu I gave him a book 他给了我一本书 ta geile wǒ yi ben shu He gave me a book The situation is very different in Chinese Since Modern Chinese makes no use of inflection the meanings of wǒ I or me and ta he or him shall be determined with their position In Classical Chinese pronouns were overtly inflected to mark case However these overt case forms are no longer used most of the alternative pronouns are considered archaic in modern Mandarin Chinese Classically 我 wǒ was used solely as the first person accusative 吾 Wu was generally used as the first person nominative Certain varieties of Chinese are known to express meaning by means of tone change although further investigations are required dubious discuss Note that the tone change must be distinguished from tone sandhi Tone sandhi is a compulsory change that occurs when certain tones are juxtaposed Tone change however is a morphologically conditioned alternation and is used as an inflectional or a derivational strategy Examples from Taishan and Zhongshan both Yue dialects spoken in Guangdong Province are shown below Taishanngwoi33 I singular ngwoi22 we plural Zhongshanhy22 go hy35 gone perfective The following table compares the personal pronouns of Sixian dialect a dialect of Taiwanese Hakka with Zaiwa and Jingpho both Tibeto Burman languages spoken in Yunnan and Burma The superscripted numbers indicate the Chao tone numerals Comparison of Personal Pronouns Sixian Zaiwa Jingpho1 Nom ŋai11 ŋo51 ŋai331 Gen ŋa24 or ŋai11 ke55 ŋa55 ŋjeʔ551 Acc ŋai11 ŋo31 ŋai332 Nom ŋ 11 naŋ51 naŋ332 Gen ŋia24 or ŋ 11 ke55 naŋ55 naʔ552 Acc ŋ 11 naŋ31 naŋ333 Nom ki11 jaŋ31 khji333 Gen kia24 or ki11 ke55 jaŋ51 khjiʔ553 Acc ki11 jaŋ31 khji33 In Shanghainese the third person singular pronoun is overtly inflected as to case and the first and second person singular pronouns exhibit a change in tone depending on case citation needed Japanese agglutinative Japanese shows a high degree of overt inflection of verbs less so of adjectives and very little of nouns but it is mostly strictly agglutinative and extremely regular Fusion of morphemes also happen in colloquial speech for example the causative passive せられ serare fuses into され sare as in 行かされる ikasareru is made to go and the non past progressive ている teiru fuses into てる teru as in 食べてる tabeteru is eating Formally every noun phrase must be marked for case but this is done by invariable particles clitic postpositions Many citation needed grammarians consider Japanese particles to be separate words and therefore not an inflection while others citation needed consider agglutination a type of overt inflection and therefore consider Japanese nouns as overtly inflected Auxiliary languages Some auxiliary languages such as Lingua Franca Nova Glosa and Frater have no inflection Other auxiliary languages such as Esperanto Ido and Interlingua have comparatively simple inflectional systems Esperanto In Esperanto an agglutinative language nouns and adjectives are inflected for case nominative accusative and number singular plural according to a simple paradigm without irregularities Verbs are not inflected for person or number but they are inflected for tense past present future and mood indicative infinitive conditional jussive They also form active and passive participles which may be past present or future All verbs are regular Ido Ido has a different form for each verbal tense past present future volitive and imperative plus an infinitive and both a present and past participle There are though no verbal inflections for person or number and all verbs are regular Nouns are marked for number singular and plural and the accusative case may be shown in certain situations typically when the direct object of a sentence precedes its verb On the other hand adjectives are unmarked for gender number or case unless they stand on their own without a noun in which case they take on the same desinences as the missing noun would have taken The definite article la the remains unaltered regardless of gender or case and also of number except when there is no other word to show plurality Pronouns are identical in all cases though exceptionally the accusative case may be marked as for nouns Interlingua Interlingua in contrast with the Romance languages has almost no irregular verb conjugations and its verb forms are the same for all persons and numbers It does however have compound verb tenses similar to those in the Romance Germanic and Slavic languages ille ha vivite he has lived illa habeva vivite she had lived Nouns are inflected by number taking a plural s but rarely by gender only when referring to a male or female being Interlingua has no noun adjective agreement by gender number or case As a result adjectives ordinarily have no inflections They may take the plural form if they are being used in place of a noun le povres the poor See alsoAgreement linguistics Diction Intonation linguistics Introflection ʾIʿrab Lexeme Marker linguistics Morpheme Nominal TAM Periphrasis Righthand head rule Suppletion Synthetic language Tense aspect mood Uninflected word Linguistic relativityNotesMore include pronouns determiners participles prepositions and postpositions numerals and articles CitationsFootnotes Crystal David 2008 A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics 6th ed pp 243 244 Malden MA Blackwell Owens Jonathan 1998 Case and proto Arabic Part I Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 61 51 73 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00015755 S2CID 204970487 Brinton Laurel J 2000 The Structure of Modern English A Linguistic Introduction Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins p 104 ISBN 9781556196621 Section 4 Inflectional Morphemes Analyzing Grammar in Context University of Nevada Las Vegas Retrieved 11 March 2024 Derivation and Inflection PDF Retrieved 11 March 2024 via websites umich edu jlawler Anderson Stephen R 1985 Inflectional Morphology in Shopen Timothy ed Language typology and syntactic description Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press pp 162 164 Nadarajan S 2006 A Crosslinguistic study of Reduplication The Arizona Working Papers in Second Language Acquisition and Teaching 13 39 53 Xu D 2012 Reduplication in languages A case study of languages of China Plurality and classifiers across languages in China Berlin Germany Mouton de Gruyter pp 43 66 Hsu S C 2008 The Structure Analysis and Tone Sandhi of Reduplicative Adjectives in Taiwanese Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences of NHCUE 1 1 27 48 Rubino C 2005 Reduplication Form function and distribution In B Hurch Ed Studies on Reduplication pp 11 29 Berlin Germany Mouton de Gruyter Reid L A 2009 On the diachronic development of C1V1 reduplication in some Austronesian languages Morphology 19 2 239 doi 10 1007 s11525 009 9142 9 hdl 10125 33040 S2CID 40795368 Palancar Enrique L amp Leonard Jean Leo 2014 Tone and inflection An introduction In Enrique L Palancar amp Jean Leo Leonard Eds Tone and Inflection New facts under new perspectives HAL 01099327 Feist Timothy amp Enrique L Palancar 2015 Oto Manguean Inflectional Class Database Tlatepuzco Chinantec University of Surrey doi 10 15126 SMG 28 1 01 Hyman L M 2016 Morphological tonal assignments in conflict Who wins In Palancar E L Leonard J L eds Tone and Inflection New Facts and New Perspectives Berlin Germany Walter de Gruyter pp 15 39 Lyons C 1986 The Syntax of English Genitive Constructions Journal of Linguistics 22 1 123 143 Lowe J J Nat Lang Linguist Theory 2016 34 157 doi 10 1007 s11049 015 9300 1 Dahl Osten Koptjevskaja Tamm Maria 2001 The Circum Baltic Languages Grammar and typology Vol 2 Grammar and Typology Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins p 672 Hewson John Bubenik Vit 2006 From case to adposition the development of configurational syntax in Indo European languages Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science Volume 4 Amsterdam Benjamins p 206 Ryding Karin C 2005 A Reference Grammar of Modern Standard Arabic King Alan R The Basque Language A Practical Introduction University of Nevada Press Reno Nevada Manandise Esmeralda Evidence from Basque for a New Theory of Grammar doctoral dissertation in Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics A Garland Series Jorge Hankamer general ed Garland Publishing Inc New York amp London Manandise Esmeralda Evidence from Basque for a New Theory of Grammar doctoral dissertation in Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics A Garland Series Jorge Hankamer general ed Garland Publishing Inc New York amp London Norman Jerry 1988 Chinese p 98 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Chen M Y 2000 Tone Sandhi Patterns across Chinese dialects Cambridge England Cambridge University Press Lai W Y 2010 The Source of Hakka Personal Pronoun and Genitive with the Viewpoint of Diminutive Journal of Taiwanese Languages and Literature 5 1 53 80 Sun H K 1996 Case markers of personal pronouns in Tibeto Burman languages Linguistics of the Tibeto Burman Area 19 2 1 15 doi 10 32655 LTBA 19 2 01 References Agirre E et al 1992 XUXEN A spelling checker corrector for Basque based on two level morphology Proceedings of the Third Conference of Applied Natural Language Processing PDF pp 119 125 archived from the original PDF on 30 September 2005 Bubenik Vit 1999 An introduction to the study of morphology LINCOM coursebooks in linguistics 07 Munich LINCOM Europa ISBN 3 89586 570 2 Norman Jerry 1988 Chinese Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29653 6 pbk Further readingBauer Laurie 2003 Introducing linguistic morphology 2nd ed Washington D C Georgetown University Press ISBN 0 87840 343 4 Haspelmath Martin 2002 Understanding morphology London Arnold Oxford University Press ISBN 0 340 76025 7 hb pbk Katamba Francis 1993 Morphology Modern linguistics series New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 10101 5 hb pbk Matthews Peter 1991 Morphology 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 41043 6 hb pbk Nichols Johanna 1986 Head marking and dependent marking grammar Language 62 1 56 119 doi 10 1353 lan 1986 0014 S2CID 144574879 De Reuse Willem J 1996 A practical grammar of the San Carlos Apache language LINCOM Studies in Native American Linguistics 51 LINCOM ISBN 3 89586 861 2 Spencer Andrew Zwicky Arnold M eds 1998 The handbook of morphology Blackwell handbooks in linguistics Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 18544 5 Stump Gregory T 2001 Inflectional morphology A theory of paradigm structure Cambridge studies in linguistics Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 78047 0 Van Valin Robert D Jr 2001 An introduction to syntax Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 63566 7 pbk hb External linksLook up inflection in Wiktionary the free dictionary SIL articles SIL What is inflection SIL What is an inflectional affix SIL What is an inflectional category SIL What is a morphological process SIL What is derivation SIL Comparison of inflection and derivation SIL What is an agglutinative language SIL What is a fusional language SIL What is an isolating language SIL What is a polysynthetic language Lexicon of Linguistics articles Lexicon of Linguistics Agglutinating Language Fusional Morphology Isolating Language Polysynthetic Language Lexicon of Linguistics Inflection Derivation Lexicon of Linguistics Conjugation Declension Lexicon of Linguistics Base Stem Root Lexicon of Linguistics Defective Paradigm Lexicon of Linguistics Strong Verb Lexicon of Linguistics Inflection Phrase IP INFL AGR Tense Lexicon of Linguistics Lexicalist Hypothesis