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Thus from the 14th to the 16th century there was a group of about one hundred nouns with two genitive singular forms : the older genitive , with apparently no ending , and the new genitive with -s , which gradually replaced the other.1 ...
Thus from the 14th to the 16th century there was a group of about one hundred nouns with two genitive singular forms : the older genitive , with apparently no ending , and the new genitive with -s , which gradually replaced the other.1 ...
Seite 55
nouns in -en . The reason for this is easily seen . The -s or -es ending for the genitive singular was the rule for all strong nouns . The nouns which were shifting to the strong declension showed forms in -ens with increasing frequency ...
nouns in -en . The reason for this is easily seen . The -s or -es ending for the genitive singular was the rule for all strong nouns . The nouns which were shifting to the strong declension showed forms in -ens with increasing frequency ...
Seite 356
Nouns have the indeterminative and determinative categories . There are three persons , three numbers ( singular , dual , plural ) , and two genders ( masculine and feminine ) . The person - number - gender categories are expressed in ...
Nouns have the indeterminative and determinative categories . There are three persons , three numbers ( singular , dual , plural ) , and two genders ( masculine and feminine ) . The person - number - gender categories are expressed in ...
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Inhalt
The IndoEuropean Semivowels in Albanian | 12 |
Quintilian on Greek Letters Lacking in Latin | 24 |
Definite Article + Family Name in Italian | 33 |
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according American appears aspirate assume becomes beside called character cited clusters common complete compound connection considered consonant containing contrast corresponding derived dialects dictionary discussion distinction early element ending English evidence examples existence explained expression fact final formations forms French further Germanic give given Grammar Greek hand Hitt indicate influence initial Intonation Italian Italy language laryngeal later Latin linguistic material meaning Michigan names nouns occur original perfect perhaps person phonemes position possible preceding prefix present probably pronunciation reading reference relation represents result says seems Serving short similar Society sound speakers speech spirant stem stop stress Sturtevant suffix suggests syllable term texts tion tone University usually verb visarga voiceless vowel words writing