- languages, this is
realized by an
inflectional suffix, also
known as
desinence. In the example: I was
hoping the
cloth wouldn't fade, but it has faded...
- far-reaching use of
grammatical gender. In these, the
separate gendered desinences (grammatical suffices) of the
words may be
given divided by
slashes or...
-
derivational morphemes is
often called the stem. The
decomposition stem +
desinence can then be used to
study inflection.
Linguistics portal Language portal...
- Catalan, the
inchoative desinences for
verbs are -isc/-ixo, -ix, -ixen, -isca. In
Eastern Catalan, the
inchoative desinences for
verbs are -eixo, -eix...
- metaphony. ^
Different evolution of the
group /ste/ led to
different desinences for the past
tense formation along Galician geography.
Galician allows...
- of *тѣxъ)
absence of
palatalization of the stem with the new -ѣ and -и
desinences, as in Old East
Slavic nominative-accusative
plural of а-stems in -ě,...
- "Uddin" is not a surname, but the
second half of a two-word name (the
desinence -u of the
construct state nominative, plus the article,
appearing as -d-...
-
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")...
- allowed; laid, set down; placed" ⇒ ; dēsinō "I
leave off, cease, desist" (>
desinence); pōnō < po + sinō "I place, put, lay; set up" ⇒ ktízō "I found, build...
-
indicate a
Latin ablative in pre-modern
scribal practice. This
ablative desinence happened to be
frequently combined with
ordinal numerals indicating dates...