• A masculine ending and feminine ending or weak ending are terms used in prosody, the study of verse form. "masculine ending" refers to a line ending in...
    10 KB (1,204 words) - 22:48, 21 January 2024
  • to: Feminine ending, in meter, a line of verse that ends with an unstressed syllable. See Masculine and feminine endings Feminine ending or feminine cadence...
    722 bytes (130 words) - 20:19, 8 June 2017
  • divisions include masculine and feminine; masculine, feminine, and neuter; or animate and inanimate. Depending on the language and the word, this assignment...
    99 KB (12,112 words) - 18:13, 7 July 2024
  • Adjectives ending in -en (e.g. houten, koperen) did not receive any endings, like in modern Dutch. The masculine and feminine endings in -en and -e of the...
    36 KB (3,955 words) - 21:46, 21 June 2024
  • bona, bonum 'good' use first-declension endings for the feminine, and second-declension for masculine and neuter. Other adjectives such as celer, celeris...
    89 KB (5,194 words) - 08:23, 26 June 2024
  • rhythm of their lines, using devices such as inversion, elision, masculine and feminine endings, the caesura, using secondary stress, the addition of extra-metrical...
    4 KB (627 words) - 17:03, 25 March 2022
  • and decline the same way. Some feminine nouns (and a few masculine nouns) have a variant stem ـَاة (-āt-), again with the same declensional endings....
    75 KB (6,820 words) - 23:49, 25 June 2024
  • superscript or superior (and often underlined) masculine ordinal indicator, º, and feminine ordinal indicator, ª, originally from Romance and then via the cultural...
    37 KB (3,395 words) - 10:00, 16 June 2024
  • methods: Orthographic solutions strive to include both the masculine and feminine endings in the word. Examples include hyphens (étudiant-e-s), median-periods...
    17 KB (1,689 words) - 19:28, 5 November 2023
  • sometimes on the ending. In first masculine, second feminine and first adjectival declension, accentual types affect the endings in some cases. Some words can...
    253 KB (13,668 words) - 07:49, 22 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gender neutrality in languages with grammatical gender
    methods. Orthographic solutions strive to include both the masculine and feminine endings in the word. Examples include hyphens (étudiant-e-s), middle...
    59 KB (6,939 words) - 05:54, 11 June 2024
  • the masculine). Polish: Masculine personal, Masculine animate, Masculine inanimate, Feminine, Neuter (traditionally, only masculine, feminine and neuter...
    26 KB (2,169 words) - 13:59, 31 May 2024
  • Light ending may refer to: Feminine ending, in grammatical gender, the final syllable or suffixed letters that mark words as feminine Masculine and feminine...
    280 bytes (71 words) - 14:04, 27 May 2021
  • feminine noun, and þæt (which sounds like “that”) with a neuter noun. Adjectives change endings: for instance, since hring ("ring") is masculine and cuppe...
    84 KB (8,373 words) - 15:02, 31 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Grammatical gender in Spanish
    gender, either masculine or feminine, in the context of a sentence. Generally, nouns referring to males or male animals are masculine, while those referring...
    13 KB (1,525 words) - 01:10, 17 June 2024
  • hard; consonant changes caused by certain endings (such as the -ie of the locative case, and the -i of the masculine personal plural), which historically entailed...
    52 KB (6,181 words) - 15:45, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Given name
    Given name (redirect from Masculine name)
    simply be named "Jim", and it is not short for James. Examples: Beth, Ben, Zach, Tom. Feminine variations exist for many masculine names, often in multiple...
    48 KB (5,181 words) - 22:38, 10 July 2024
  • List of diminutives by language (category Pages with non-English text lacking appropriate markup and no ISO hint)
    replacing the masculine and feminine endings -o and -a, respectively. The variants -(z)ito and -(z)ita, direct analogues of Spanish -(c)ito and -(c)ita, are...
    95 KB (10,779 words) - 20:26, 12 May 2024
  • all nouns are classified according to grammatical gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and are used in a number (singular, dual, or plural). According...
    48 KB (2,945 words) - 15:23, 30 October 2023
  • pronoun wer: Masculine/Feminine/Neuter/Plural: wessen NOT: Die Soldaten dessen Armee (correct: Die Soldaten dieser Armee) German articles and pronouns in...
    5 KB (434 words) - 00:58, 7 September 2023
  • -ее. The masculine accusative singular and the accusative plural endings depend on animacy, as with nouns. The instrumental feminine ending -ой/-ей has...
    160 KB (8,231 words) - 01:15, 4 July 2024
  • All German nouns are included in one of three grammatical genders: masculine, feminine or neuter. While the gender often does not directly influence the...
    13 KB (1,167 words) - 02:48, 26 June 2024
  • syllable unstressed Feminine Endings, a musicological feminist work published in 1991 Male (disambiguation) Female (disambiguation) Masculine (disambiguation)...
    612 bytes (106 words) - 00:43, 17 December 2017
  • Thumbnail for Provençal dialect
    the feminine singular and li in the masculine and feminine plural (lis before vowels). Nouns and adjectives usually drop the Latin masculine endings, but...
    12 KB (1,116 words) - 10:30, 18 June 2024
  • genders (masculine, feminine and neuter) and two numbers (singular and plural). The respective endings for nouns are:[citation needed] masculine singular:...
    2 KB (75 words) - 11:08, 31 October 2023
  • genitive (masculine des vs feminine der), demonstrative determiners (masculine diens vs feminine dier) and relative pronouns (masculine wiens vs feminine wier)...
    23 KB (2,747 words) - 08:56, 10 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Proto-Italic language
    Proto-Italic language (category Harv and Sfn no-target errors)
    aorist endings otherwise. Ending reshaped after the present active endings. Extended by *-ond from the aorist endings to form the usual ending -ērunt...
    76 KB (4,402 words) - 16:04, 29 June 2024
  • and six grammatical cases (); some of these parts of speech in the singular are also declined by three grammatical genders (masculine, feminine and neuter)...
    114 KB (5,681 words) - 13:13, 2 June 2024
  • mostly masculine or neuter; if they end in -ă or -a they are usually feminine. In the plural, the ending -i corresponds generally to masculine nouns,...
    53 KB (5,165 words) - 18:21, 2 July 2024
  • Polish-sounding surnames ending with the masculine -ski suffix, including -cki and -dzki, and the corresponding feminine suffix -ska/-cka/-dzka were...
    50 KB (5,899 words) - 01:23, 13 July 2024