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27. The inflections for gender belong, of course, only to masculine and feminine nouns. Forms would be a more accurate word than inflections, since inflection applies only to the case of nouns.
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www.lousywriter.com/nouns_gender.php
www.lousywriter.com/nouns_gender.php
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A Finnish noun begins with a stem. In all of the cases below, the stem is identical with the nominative singular. A plural marker, if any, immediately follows the stem. After the stem and the possible plural marker comes one of several possible case endings.
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www.stanford.edu/~laurik/fsmbook/exercises/FinnishNounI...
www.stanford.edu/~laurik/fsmbook/exercises/FinnishNounInflection.html
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FINNISH NOUN INFLECTION / 115 the entire stem contained only neutral vowels. ...... after an inflected noun ending in -C? The violation of the Stem ...
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www.stanford.edu/~kiparsky/Papers/finnish.article.pdf
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Various characteristics of noun inflection that only affect a particular sub-group of nouns are described under Features. These phenomena are often connected with the pronunciation and accentuation of wordforms.
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www.canoo.net/services/OnlineGrammar/InflectionRules/FR...
www.canoo.net/services/OnlineGrammar/InflectionRules/FRegeln-N/index.html?lang=en
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A sample of the range of types of noun stems is given in Table 1, and ten sets of suffixes are given in Table 2. ... Relevant information for each noun includes its citation stem (Column 1), for some nouns a variant stem (Column 2), a gloss (Column 3), and its gender (Column 4). Nouns are inherently masculine (MASC),
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www2.hawaii.edu/~bender/noun.html
www2.hawaii.edu/~bender/noun.html
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In the following exercises you can practice your recognition of Old English noun inflection. The exercises present noun-headed Noun Phrases in an increasing degree of complexity:
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www.english.su.se/nlj/ofm/oex/nom_menu.htm
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The literature on German noun inflection is large and includes such milestones as Wurzel (1970), Lieber (1981), and Wurzel (1984). A systematic review that did justice to the relevant literature of the last thirty years would be at least as long as the present document.
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www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/lab/nlp/polylex/polynode50.html
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Noun structures are made up of minimal units of meaning: added to roots with lexical meaning, suffixes and endings add units of grammatical meaning. These morphemes (roots, suffixes, and endings) make up the morphology of older Indo-European words.
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www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/iedocctr/ie-ling/infl-n...
www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/iedocctr/ie-ling/infl-noun.html
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dagans -- strong noun, masculine; accusative plural of <dags> day -- days ... gagrefts -- strong noun, feminine; nominative singular of <gagrēfts> decree -- a decree ... Agustau -- strong proper noun, masculine; dative singular of <Agustus> Augustus -- Augustus...
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www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/eieol/gotol-1.html
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