Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet INFLECT


INFLECT

Definition av INFLECT

  1. (grammatik, om ord) böja, verb konjugera, substantiv och adjektiv deklinera

1

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

12
CT
EC
ECT
FL
FLE
IN
INF
LE

15

1

31

329
CE
CEF
CEI
CEL


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Exempel på hur man kan använda INFLECT i en mening

  • Tone is the use of pitch in language to distinguish lexical or grammatical meaning—that is, to distinguish or to inflect words.
  • Varying in duration from five to ninety minutes, Kuchar's video diaries inflect his everyday life with familiar themes of Kuchar's oeuvre such as appetite, voluptuousness, the hilarity of bathos, campy appropriation, flatulence, the weather, urination, friendship, love, and the artificiality of cinema itself.
  • Most verbs inflect in a simple regular fashion, although there are about 200 irregular verbs; the irregularity in nearly all cases concerns the past tense and past participle forms.
  • Some languages inflect the verb, which changes the ending to indicate the past tense, while non-inflected languages may use other words meaning, for example, "yesterday" or "last week" to indicate that something took place in the past.
  • Southern Sámi nouns inflect for singular and plural and have eight cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, illative, locative, elative, comitative, and essive, but number is not distinguished in the essive.
  • Nuer nouns inflect for two numbers, singular and plural, and three cases, nominative, genitive and locative.
  • With very few exceptions, okurigana are only used for kun'yomi (native Japanese readings), not for on'yomi (Chinese readings), as Chinese morphemes do not inflect in Japanese, and their pronunciation is inferred from context, since many are used as parts of compound words (kango).
  • Personal pronouns in Antillean Creole are invariable so they do not inflect for case as in European languages such as French or English.
  • Bittle (1963) identifies 14 positions in the verb template, divided into the verbal base (which defines the lexical meaning of the verb) and paradigmatic prefixes (which inflect the verb for person, number, tense, aspect, mood, and voice).
  • There are also adjectives that do not inflect at all (generally words borrowed from other languages, such as the French beige (also Hispanicised to beis)).
  • Verbs inflect for person, number, tense, and mood, with affirmative, interrogative, and negative conjugations of some verbs.
  • Additionally, there are coverbs which have aspectual properties, but do not inflect for number, tense or person.
  • In Canela, like in all Northern Jê languages, verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a finite form and a nonfinite form.
  • Like nominals, adjectives fall into declension classes, and although, being adjectives, they do not inflect for nominative case and there is no agreement within the phrase for number or definiteness, the declensional differences relating to oblique case marking do appear in U-declension adjectives when they function attributively.
  • Kabyle verbs inflect for four paradigms of tense–aspect–mood, three of them conventionally labelled the preterite (expressing perfective aspect), intensive aorist (expressing imperfective aspect) and aorist (essentially functioning like an irrealis or subjunctive mood).
  • The most common type of apophony is the Kuki-Chin specific vowel stem alternation where the stem vowel of a verb changes to inflect its mode.
  • As in all other Northern Jê languages, Mẽbêngôkre verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a finite form and a nonfinite form.
  • As in all other Northern Jê languages, verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a finite form (also form B and main form) and a nonfinite form (also form A and embedded form).
  • Unlike Old Chinese, Classical Chinese has long been noted for the absence of inflectional morphology: nouns and adjectives do not inflect for case, definiteness, gender, specificity or number; neither do verbs inflect for person, number, tense, aspect, telicity, valency, evidentiality or voice.
  • As in all other Northern Jê languages, verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a finite form (also Short Form and main form) and a nonfinite form (also Long Form).


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