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Declension

In linguistics, declension (verb: to decline) is the changing of the form of a word, generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence, by way of some inflection. Declensions may apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and articles to indicate number (e.g. singular, dual, plural), case (e.g. nominative case, accusative case, genitive case, dative case), gender (e.g. masculine, neuter, feminine), and a number of other grammatical categories. Meanwhile, the inflectional change of verbs is called conjugation.

Declension occurs in many of the world's languages. It is an important aspect of language families like Quechuan (i.e., languages native to the Andes), Indo-European (e.g. German, Lithuanian, Latvian, Slavic, Sanskrit, Latin, Ancient Greek, Modern Greek, Classical Armenian and Modern Armenian and Kurdish), Bantu (e.g. Zulu, Kikuyu), Semitic (e.g. Modern Standard Arabic), Finno-Ugric (e.g. Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian), and Turkic (e.g. Turkish).

Old English was an inflectional language, but largely abandoned inflectional changes as it evolved into Modern English. Though traditionally classified as synthetic, Modern English has moved towards an analytic language.

History

It is agreed that Ancient Greeks had a "vague" idea of the forms of a noun in their language. A fragment of Anacreon seems to confirm this idea. Nevertheless, it cannot be concluded that the Ancient Greeks actually knew what the cases were. The Stoics developed many basic notions that today are the rudiments of linguistics. The idea of grammatical cases is also traced back to the Stoics, but it's still not completely clear what the Stoics exactly meant with their notion of cases.[1][2]

English-speaking perspective

Unlike English, many languages use suffixes to specify subjects and objects and word cases in general. Inflected languages have a freer word order than modern English, an analytic language in which word order identifies the subject and object.[3][4] As an example, even though both of the following sentences consist of the same words, the meaning is different:[3]

  • "The dog chased a cat."
  • "A cat chased the dog."

Hypothetically speaking, suppose English were a language with a more complex declension system in which cases were formed by adding the suffixes:

The above sentence could be formed with any of the following word orders and would have the same meaning:[3]

  • "The dogno chased a catac."
  • "A catac chased the dogno."
  • or "Chased a catac the dogno."

As a more complex example, the sentence:

  • Mum, this little boy's dog was chasing a cat down our street!

becomes nonsensical in English if the words are rearranged (because there are no cases):

  • A cat, mum, our street down was chasing dog this little boy's!

But if English were a highly inflected language, like Latin or some Slavic languages such as Croatian, both sentences could mean the same thing.[3] They would both contain five nouns in five different cases: mum – vocative (hey!), dog – nominative (who?), boy – genitive (of whom?), cat – accusative (whom?), street – locative (where?);[5] the adjective little would be in the same case as the noun it modifies (boy), and the case of the determiner our would agree with the case of the noun it determines (street).[6]

Using the case suffixes invented for this example, the original sentence would read:

  • Mumvo, thisge littlege boyge dogno was chasing a catac down ourlo streetlo!

And like other inflected languages, the sentence rearranged in the following ways would mean virtually the same thing, but with different expressiveness:[7]

  • A catac, mumvo, ourlo streetlo down was chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge!
  • Mumvo, a catac was down ourlo streetlo chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge!
  • Down streetlo ourlo catac was chasing thisge littlege boyge dogno, mumvo!

Instead of the locative, the instrumental form of "down our street" could also be used:[8]

  • Mumvo, thisge littlege boyge dogno ourin streetin was chasing a catac!
  • A catac was, mumvo, ourin streetin chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge
  • Ourin streetin catac was chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge, momvo!

Thus it is demonstrated how different word orders preserving the original meaning are possible in an inflected language,[7] while modern English relies on word order for meaning (but with a little flexibility).[3] This is one of the advantages of an inflected language. The English sentences above, when read without the made-up case suffixes, are confusing.

These contrived examples are relatively simple, whereas actual inflected languages have a far more complicated set of declensions, where the suffixes (or prefixes, or infixes) change depending on the gender of the noun, the quantity of the noun, and other possible factors. This complexity and the possible lengthening of words is one of the disadvantages of inflected languages. Notably, many of these languages lack articles. There may also be irregular nouns where the declensions are unique for each word (like irregular verbs with conjugation). In inflected languages, other parts of speech such as numerals, demonstratives, adjectives,[9] and articles[10] are also declined.

Modern English

In Modern English, the system of declensions is so simple compared to some other languages that the term declension is rarely used.

Nouns

Most nouns in English have distinct singular and plural forms. Nouns and most noun phrases can form a possessive construction. Plurality is most commonly shown by the ending -s (or -es), whereas possession is always shown by the enclitic -'s or, for plural forms ending in s, by just an apostrophe.

Consider, for example, the forms of the noun girl. Most speakers pronounce all forms other than the singular plain form (girl) exactly the same.[note 1]

Singular Plural
Plain girl girls
Possessive girl's girls'

By contrast, a few irregular nouns (like man/men) are slightly more complex in their forms. In this example, all four forms are pronounced distinctly.

Singular Plural
Plain man men
Possessive man's men's

For nouns, in general, gender is not declined in Modern English. There are isolated situations where certain nouns may be modified to reflect gender, though not in a systematic fashion. Loan words from other languages, particularly Latin and the Romance languages, often preserve their gender-specific forms in English, e.g. alumnus (masculine singular) and alumna (feminine singular). Similarly, names borrowed from other languages show comparable distinctions: Andrew and Andrea, Paul and Paula, etc. Additionally, suffixes such as -ess, -ette, and -er are sometimes applied to create overtly gendered versions of nouns, with marking for feminine being much more common than marking for masculine. Many nouns can actually function as members of two genders or even all three, and the gender classes of English nouns are usually determined by their agreement with pronouns, rather than marking on the nouns themselves.

There can be other derivations from nouns that are not considered declensions. For example, the proper noun Britain has the associated descriptive adjective British and the demonym Briton. Though these words are clearly related, and are generally considered cognates, they are not specifically treated as forms of the same word, and thus are not declensions.

Pronouns

Pronouns in English have more complex declensions. For example, the first person "I":

Singular Plural
Subjective I we
Objective me us
Dependent possessive my our
Independent possessive mine ours

Whereas nouns do not distinguish between the subjective (nominative) and objective (oblique) cases, some pronouns do; that is, they decline to reflect their relationship to a verb or preposition, or case. Consider the difference between he (subjective) and him (objective), as in "He saw it" and "It saw him"; similarly, consider who, which is subjective, and the objective whom (although it is increasingly common to use who for both).

The one situation where gender[note 2] is still clearly part of the English language is in the pronouns for the third person singular. Consider the following:

Masculine Feminine Neuter
(non-person)
Neuter
(person)
Subjective he she it they
Objective him her them
Dependent possessive his its their
Independent possessive hers theirs

The distinguishing of neuter for persons and non-persons is peculiar to English. This has existed since the 14th century.[11][12] However, the use of singular they is often restricted to specific contexts, depending on the dialect or the speaker. It is most typically used to refer to a single person of unknown gender (e.g. "someone left their jacket behind") or a hypothetical person where gender is insignificant (e.g. "If someone wants to, then they should"). Its use has expanded in recent years due to increasing social recognition of persons who do not identify themselves as male or female.[13] (see gender-nonbinary) Note that the singular they still uses plural verb forms, reflecting its origins.

Adjectives and adverbs

Some English adjectives and adverbs are declined for degree of comparison. The unmarked form is the positive form, such as quick. Comparative forms are formed with the ending -er (quicker), while superlative forms are formed with -est (quickest). Some are uncomparable; the remainder are usually periphrastic constructions with more (more beautiful) and most (most modestly). See degree of comparison for more.

Adjectives are not declined for case in Modern English (though they were in Old English), nor number nor gender.[note 3]

Determiners

The demonstrative determiners this and that are declined for number, as these and those.

The article is never regarded as declined in Modern English, although formally, the words that and possibly she correspond to forms of the predecessor of the ( m., þæt n., sēo f.) as it was declined in Old English.

Latin

Just as verbs in Latin are conjugated to indicate grammatical information, Latin nouns and adjectives that modify them are declined to signal their roles in sentences. There are five important cases for Latin nouns: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, and ablative. Since the vocative case usually takes the same form as the nominative, it is seldom spelt out in grammar books.[dubious ] Yet another case, the locative, is limited to a small number of words.

The usual basic functions of these cases are as follows:

  • Nominative case indicates the subject.
  • Genitive case indicates possession and can be translated with ‘of’.
  • Dative case marks the indirect object and can be translated with ‘to’ or ‘for’.
  • Accusative case marks the direct object.
  • Ablative case is used to modify verbs and can be translated as ‘by’, ‘with’, ‘from’, etc.
  • Vocative case is used to address a person or thing.

The genitive, dative, accusative, and ablative also have important functions to indicate the object of a preposition.

Given below is the declension paradigm of Latin puer ‘boy’ and puella ‘girl’:

Case Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative puer puerī puella puellae
Genitive puerī puerōrum puellae puellārum
Dative puerō puerīs puellae puellīs
Accusative puerum puerōs puellam puellās
Ablative puerō puerīs puellā puellīs
Vocative puer puerī puella puellae

From the provided examples we can see how cases work:

  • liber puerī → the book of the boy (puerī boy=genitive)
  • puer puellae rosam dat → the boy gives the girl a rose (puer boy=nominative; puellae girl=dative; rosam rose=accusative; dat give=third person singular present)

Sanskrit

Sanskrit, another Indo-European language, has eight cases: nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative, ablative, locative and instrumental.[14] Some do not count vocative as a separate case, despite it having a distinctive ending in the singular, but consider it as a different use of the nominative.[15]

Sanskrit grammatical cases have been analyzed extensively. The grammarian Pāṇini identified six semantic roles or karaka, which correspond closely to the eight cases:[16]

  • agent (kartṛ, related to the nominative)
  • patient (karman, related to the accusative)
  • means (karaṇa, related to the instrumental)
  • recipient (sampradāna, related to the dative)
  • source (apādāna, related to the ablative)
  • relation (sambandha, related to genitive)
  • locus (adhikaraṇa, related to the locative)
  • address (sambodhana, related to the vocative)

For example, consider the following sentence:

vṛkṣ-āt

from the tree

parṇ-aṁ

a leaf

bhūm-āu

to the ground

patati

falls

vṛkṣ-āt parṇ-aṁ bhūm-āu patati

{from the tree} {a leaf} {to the ground} falls

"a leaf falls from the tree to the ground"

Here leaf is the agent, tree is the source, and ground is the locus. The endings -aṁ, -at, -āu mark the cases associated with these meanings.

Declension in specific languages

Greek and Latin

Celtic languages

Germanic languages

Baltic languages

Slavic languages

Uralic languages

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ The elided possessive-indicating s of the plural possessive may be realised as [z] in some speakers' pronunciations, being separated from the plural-indicating s normally by a central vowel such as [ɨ̞].
  2. ^ Gender in English is not grammatical but natural gender.
  3. ^ A few adjectives borrowed from other languages are, or can be, declined for gender, at least in writing: blond (male) and blonde (female).

Citations

  1. ^ Frede, Michael (1994). "The Stoic Notion of a Grammatical Case". Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. 39: 13–24. doi:10.1111/j.2041-5370.1994.tb00449.x. JSTOR 43646836.
  2. ^ "Linguaggio nell'Enciclopedia Treccani".
  3. ^ a b c d e Drout, Michael. "Word Order and Cases". King Alfred's Grammar. umass.edu. from the original on 2020-02-24. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  4. ^ Martin, Howard; Ng, Alan; Korpi, Sarah. "Word Order". A Foundation Course in Reading German. University of Wisconsin-Madison. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  5. ^ "Imenice" [Nouns]. Hrvatska školska gramatika (in Croatian). Institut za hrvatski jezik i jezikoslovlje. from the original on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  6. ^ "Atribut" [Attribute]. Hrvatska školska gramatika (in Croatian). from the original on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  7. ^ a b "Red riječi u rečenici" [Word order in sentences]. Hrvatska školska gramatika (in Croatian). from the original on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  8. ^ Stolac, Diana. "Zagrebačka slavistička škola – Izražavanje prostornih značenja padežnim oblicima". hrvatskiplus.org (in Croatian). from the original on 2021-05-20.
  9. ^ "Vrste riječi". Hrvatska školska gramatika (in Croatian). from the original on 2018-03-26. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  10. ^ Martin, Howard; Ng, Alan; Korpi, Sarah. "Cases". A Foundation Course in Reading German. University of Wisconsin-Madison. from the original on 2015-09-19. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  11. ^ Fowler, H.W. (2015). Butterfield, Jeremy (ed.). Fowler's Dictionary of Modern English Usage. Oxford University Press. p. 814. ISBN 978-0-19-966135-0.
  12. ^ Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2002). The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 494. ISBN 0-521-43146-8.
  13. ^ Andrews, Travis M. (March 28, 2017). "The singular, gender-neutral 'they' added to the Associated Press Stylebook". Washington Post.
  14. ^ James Clackson (2007) Indo-European linguistics: an introduction, p.90
  15. ^ Amba Kulkarni and Peter Scharf (eds), Sanskrit Computational Linguistics: First and Second International Symposia Rocquencourt, France, October 29-31, 2007 and Providence, RI, USA, May 15-17, 2008, Revised Selected Papers, Volume 5402 of Lecture notes in artificial intelligence, Springer, 2009, ISBN 3-642-00154-8, pp. 64–68.
  16. ^ Pieter Cornelis Verhagen, Handbook of oriental studies: India. A history of Sanskrit grammatical literature in Tibet, Volume 2, BRILL, 2001, ISBN 90-04-11882-9, p. 281.

External links

  • The Status of Morphological Case in the Icelandic Lexicon by Eiríkur Rögnvaldsson. Discussion of whether cases convey any inherent syntactic or semantic meaning.
  • Optimal Case: The Distribution of Case in German and Icelandic by Dieter Wunderlich
  • Lexicon of Linguistics: 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
  • classical Greek declension

declension, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september, 2017. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Declension news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message In linguistics declension verb to decline is the changing of the form of a word generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence by way of some inflection Declensions may apply to nouns pronouns adjectives adverbs and articles to indicate number e g singular dual plural case e g nominative case accusative case genitive case dative case gender e g masculine neuter feminine and a number of other grammatical categories Meanwhile the inflectional change of verbs is called conjugation Declension occurs in many of the world s languages It is an important aspect of language families like Quechuan i e languages native to the Andes Indo European e g German Lithuanian Latvian Slavic Sanskrit Latin Ancient Greek Modern Greek Classical Armenian and Modern Armenian and Kurdish Bantu e g Zulu Kikuyu Semitic e g Modern Standard Arabic Finno Ugric e g Hungarian Finnish Estonian and Turkic e g Turkish Old English was an inflectional language but largely abandoned inflectional changes as it evolved into Modern English Though traditionally classified as synthetic Modern English has moved towards an analytic language Contents 1 History 2 English speaking perspective 3 Modern English 3 1 Nouns 3 2 Pronouns 3 3 Adjectives and adverbs 3 4 Determiners 4 Latin 5 Sanskrit 6 Declension in specific languages 6 1 Greek and Latin 6 2 Celtic languages 6 3 Germanic languages 6 4 Baltic languages 6 5 Slavic languages 6 6 Uralic languages 7 See also 8 Notes and references 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 9 External linksHistory EditIt is agreed that Ancient Greeks had a vague idea of the forms of a noun in their language A fragment of Anacreon seems to confirm this idea Nevertheless it cannot be concluded that the Ancient Greeks actually knew what the cases were The Stoics developed many basic notions that today are the rudiments of linguistics The idea of grammatical cases is also traced back to the Stoics but it s still not completely clear what the Stoics exactly meant with their notion of cases 1 2 English speaking perspective EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Unlike English many languages use suffixes to specify subjects and objects and word cases in general Inflected languages have a freer word order than modern English an analytic language in which word order identifies the subject and object 3 4 As an example even though both of the following sentences consist of the same words the meaning is different 3 The dog chased a cat A cat chased the dog Hypothetically speaking suppose English were a language with a more complex declension system in which cases were formed by adding the suffixes no for nominative singular ge genitive da dative ac accusative lo locative in instrumental vo vocative ab ablative The above sentence could be formed with any of the following word orders and would have the same meaning 3 The dogno chased a catac A catac chased the dogno or Chased a catac the dogno As a more complex example the sentence Mum this little boy s dog was chasing a cat down our street becomes nonsensical in English if the words are rearranged because there are no cases A cat mum our street down was chasing dog this little boy s But if English were a highly inflected language like Latin or some Slavic languages such as Croatian both sentences could mean the same thing 3 They would both contain five nouns in five different cases mum vocative hey dog nominative who boy genitive of whom cat accusative whom street locative where 5 the adjective little would be in the same case as the noun it modifies boy and the case of the determiner our would agree with the case of the noun it determines street 6 Using the case suffixes invented for this example the original sentence would read Mumvo thisge littlege boyge dogno was chasing a catac down ourlo streetlo And like other inflected languages the sentence rearranged in the following ways would mean virtually the same thing but with different expressiveness 7 A catac mumvo ourlo streetlo down was chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge Mumvo a catac was down ourlo streetlo chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge Down streetlo ourlo catac was chasing thisge littlege boyge dogno mumvo Instead of the locative the instrumental form of down our street could also be used 8 Mumvo thisge littlege boyge dogno ourin streetin was chasing a catac A catac was mumvo ourin streetin chasing dogno thisge littlege boygeOurin streetin catac was chasing dogno thisge littlege boyge momvo Thus it is demonstrated how different word orders preserving the original meaning are possible in an inflected language 7 while modern English relies on word order for meaning but with a little flexibility 3 This is one of the advantages of an inflected language The English sentences above when read without the made up case suffixes are confusing These contrived examples are relatively simple whereas actual inflected languages have a far more complicated set of declensions where the suffixes or prefixes or infixes change depending on the gender of the noun the quantity of the noun and other possible factors This complexity and the possible lengthening of words is one of the disadvantages of inflected languages Notably many of these languages lack articles There may also be irregular nouns where the declensions are unique for each word like irregular verbs with conjugation In inflected languages other parts of speech such as numerals demonstratives adjectives 9 and articles 10 are also declined Modern English EditFurther information Old English grammar Nouns In Modern English the system of declensions is so simple compared to some other languages that the term declension is rarely used Nouns Edit Most nouns in English have distinct singular and plural forms Nouns and most noun phrases can form a possessive construction Plurality is most commonly shown by the ending s or es whereas possession is always shown by the enclitic s or for plural forms ending in s by just an apostrophe Consider for example the forms of the noun girl Most speakers pronounce all forms other than the singular plain form girl exactly the same note 1 Singular PluralPlain girl girlsPossessive girl s girls By contrast a few irregular nouns like man men are slightly more complex in their forms In this example all four forms are pronounced distinctly Singular PluralPlain man menPossessive man s men sFor nouns in general gender is not declined in Modern English There are isolated situations where certain nouns may be modified to reflect gender though not in a systematic fashion Loan words from other languages particularly Latin and the Romance languages often preserve their gender specific forms in English e g alumnus masculine singular and alumna feminine singular Similarly names borrowed from other languages show comparable distinctions Andrew and Andrea Paul and Paula etc Additionally suffixes such as ess ette and er are sometimes applied to create overtly gendered versions of nouns with marking for feminine being much more common than marking for masculine Many nouns can actually function as members of two genders or even all three and the gender classes of English nouns are usually determined by their agreement with pronouns rather than marking on the nouns themselves There can be other derivations from nouns that are not considered declensions For example the proper noun Britain has the associated descriptive adjective British and the demonym Briton Though these words are clearly related and are generally considered cognates they are not specifically treated as forms of the same word and thus are not declensions Pronouns Edit Pronouns in English have more complex declensions For example the first person I Singular PluralSubjective I weObjective me usDependent possessive my ourIndependent possessive mine oursWhereas nouns do not distinguish between the subjective nominative and objective oblique cases some pronouns do that is they decline to reflect their relationship to a verb or preposition or case Consider the difference between he subjective and him objective as in He saw it and It saw him similarly consider who which is subjective and the objective whom although it is increasingly common to use who for both The one situation where gender note 2 is still clearly part of the English language is in the pronouns for the third person singular Consider the following Masculine Feminine Neuter non person Neuter person Subjective he she it theyObjective him her themDependent possessive his its theirIndependent possessive hers theirsThe distinguishing of neuter for persons and non persons is peculiar to English This has existed since the 14th century 11 12 However the use of singular they is often restricted to specific contexts depending on the dialect or the speaker It is most typically used to refer to a single person of unknown gender e g someone left their jacket behind or a hypothetical person where gender is insignificant e g If someone wants to then they should Its use has expanded in recent years due to increasing social recognition of persons who do not identify themselves as male or female 13 see gender nonbinary Note that the singular they still uses plural verb forms reflecting its origins Adjectives and adverbs Edit Some English adjectives and adverbs are declined for degree of comparison The unmarked form is the positive form such as quick Comparative forms are formed with the ending er quicker while superlative forms are formed with est quickest Some are uncomparable the remainder are usually periphrastic constructions with more more beautiful and most most modestly See degree of comparison for more Adjectives are not declined for case in Modern English though they were in Old English nor number nor gender note 3 Determiners Edit The demonstrative determiners this and that are declined for number as these and those The article is never regarded as declined in Modern English although formally the words that and possibly she correspond to forms of the predecessor of the se m thaet n seo f as it was declined in Old English Latin EditMain articles Latin declension and Latin syntax Just as verbs in Latin are conjugated to indicate grammatical information Latin nouns and adjectives that modify them are declined to signal their roles in sentences There are five important cases for Latin nouns nominative genitive dative accusative and ablative Since the vocative case usually takes the same form as the nominative it is seldom spelt out in grammar books dubious discuss Yet another case the locative is limited to a small number of words The usual basic functions of these cases are as follows Nominative case indicates the subject Genitive case indicates possession and can be translated with of Dative case marks the indirect object and can be translated with to or for Accusative case marks the direct object Ablative case is used to modify verbs and can be translated as by with from etc Vocative case is used to address a person or thing The genitive dative accusative and ablative also have important functions to indicate the object of a preposition Given below is the declension paradigm of Latin puer boy and puella girl Case Singular Plural Singular PluralNominative puer pueri puella puellaeGenitive pueri puerōrum puellae puellarumDative puerō pueris puellae puellisAccusative puerum puerōs puellam puellasAblative puerō pueris puella puellisVocative puer pueri puella puellaeFrom the provided examples we can see how cases work liber pueri the book of the boy pueri boy genitive puer puellae rosam dat the boy gives the girl a rose puer boy nominative puellae girl dative rosam rose accusative dat give third person singular present Sanskrit EditMain article Sanskrit nouns Sanskrit another Indo European language has eight cases nominative vocative accusative genitive dative ablative locative and instrumental 14 Some do not count vocative as a separate case despite it having a distinctive ending in the singular but consider it as a different use of the nominative 15 Sanskrit grammatical cases have been analyzed extensively The grammarian Paṇini identified six semantic roles or karaka which correspond closely to the eight cases 16 agent kartṛ related to the nominative patient karman related to the accusative means karaṇa related to the instrumental recipient sampradana related to the dative source apadana related to the ablative relation sambandha related to genitive locus adhikaraṇa related to the locative address sambodhana related to the vocative For example consider the following sentence vṛkṣ atfrom the treeparṇ aṁa leafbhum auto the groundpatatifallsvṛkṣ at parṇ aṁ bhum au patati from the tree a leaf to the ground falls a leaf falls from the tree to the ground Here leaf is the agent tree is the source and ground is the locus The endings aṁ at au mark the cases associated with these meanings Declension in specific languages EditAlbanian declension Arabic ʾIʿrab Basque declension Hindi declensionGreek and Latin Edit Ancient Greek and Latin First declension Ancient Greek and Latin Second declension Ancient Greek and Latin Third declension Greek declension Latin declensionCeltic languages Edit Irish declensionGermanic languages Edit Dutch declension system German declension Gothic declension Icelandic declension Middle English declensionBaltic languages Edit Latvian declension Lithuanian declensionSlavic languages Edit Bosnian Croatian Montenegrin and Serbian declension Czech declension Polish declension Russian declension Slovak declension Slovene declension Ukrainian declensionUralic languages Edit Finnish language noun casesSee also EditGrammatical conjugation Grammatical case Strong inflection Weak inflectionNotes and references EditNotes Edit The elided possessive indicating s of the plural possessive may be realised as z in some speakers pronunciations being separated from the plural indicating s normally by a central vowel such as ɨ Gender in English is not grammatical but natural gender A few adjectives borrowed from other languages are or can be declined for gender at least in writing blond male and blonde female Citations Edit Frede Michael 1994 The Stoic Notion of a Grammatical Case Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 39 13 24 doi 10 1111 j 2041 5370 1994 tb00449 x JSTOR 43646836 Linguaggio nell Enciclopedia Treccani a b c d e Drout Michael Word Order and Cases King Alfred s Grammar umass edu Archived from the original on 2020 02 24 Retrieved 2021 05 22 Martin Howard Ng Alan Korpi Sarah Word Order A Foundation Course in Reading German University of Wisconsin Madison Retrieved 2021 09 23 Imenice Nouns Hrvatska skolska gramatika in Croatian Institut za hrvatski jezik i jezikoslovlje Archived from the original on 2018 03 26 Retrieved 2021 09 23 Atribut Attribute Hrvatska skolska gramatika in Croatian Archived from the original on 2018 03 26 Retrieved 2021 09 23 a b Red rijeci u recenici Word order in sentences Hrvatska skolska gramatika in Croatian Archived from the original on 2018 03 26 Retrieved 2021 09 23 Stolac Diana Zagrebacka slavisticka skola Izrazavanje prostornih znacenja padeznim oblicima hrvatskiplus org in Croatian Archived from the original on 2021 05 20 Vrste rijeci Hrvatska skolska gramatika in Croatian Archived from the original on 2018 03 26 Retrieved 2021 09 23 Martin Howard Ng Alan Korpi Sarah Cases A Foundation Course in Reading German University of Wisconsin Madison Archived from the original on 2015 09 19 Retrieved 2021 09 23 Fowler H W 2015 Butterfield Jeremy ed Fowler s Dictionary of Modern English Usage Oxford University Press p 814 ISBN 978 0 19 966135 0 Huddleston Rodney Pullum Geoffrey K 2002 The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press p 494 ISBN 0 521 43146 8 Andrews Travis M March 28 2017 The singular gender neutral they added to the Associated Press Stylebook Washington Post James Clackson 2007 Indo European linguistics an introduction p 90 Amba Kulkarni and Peter Scharf eds Sanskrit Computational Linguistics First and Second International Symposia Rocquencourt France October 29 31 2007 and Providence RI USA May 15 17 2008 Revised Selected Papers Volume 5402 of Lecture notes in artificial intelligence Springer 2009 ISBN 3 642 00154 8 pp 64 68 Pieter Cornelis Verhagen Handbook of oriental studies India A history of Sanskrit grammatical literature in Tibet Volume 2 BRILL 2001 ISBN 90 04 11882 9 p 281 External links Edit Look up declension in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Status of Morphological Case in the Icelandic Lexicon by Eirikur Rognvaldsson Discussion of whether cases convey any inherent syntactic or semantic meaning Optimal Case The Distribution of Case in German and Icelandic by Dieter Wunderlich Lexicon of Linguistics 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 classical Greek declension Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Declension amp oldid 1132420517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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