Declension

Article ID: 8645


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In linguistics , declension is a feature of inflected languages: generally, the alteration of a noun to indicate its grammatical role. An example in English is the way "he" changes to "him" when it is the grammatical object, and to "his" when it is possessive.

In inflected languages, nouns are said to decline into different forms, or morphological cases . Morphological cases are one way of indicating grammatical case ; other ways are listed below.

Declension is seen, for example, in many Indo-European languages like Latin , German and Sanskrit ; in Dravidian languages like Tamil ; in Finnish ; in Swahili and many others. Old English had an extensive case system. In modern English grammar , the same information is now mostly conveyed with word order and preposition s, though a few remnants of the older declined form of English still exist (for example, in pronouns, such as "he" vs. "him"; see Declension in English ).

Languages are categorized into several case systems, based on how they group verb agents and patients into cases:

The following are systems that some languages use to mark case instead of, or in addition to, declension:

Some languages have more than 20 cases. For an example of a language that uses a large number of cases, see Finnish language noun cases .

The lemma forms of words, which is the form chosen by convention as the canonical form of a word, is usually the most unmarked or basic case, which is typically the nominative, trigger, or absolutive case, whichever a language may have.


See also


External links

als:Deklination