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Noun - Case number and gender | A Wisdom Archive on Noun - Case number and gender |  | Noun - Case number and gender A selection of articles related to Noun - Case number and gender |  |
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Noun, Noun - Case number and gender, Noun - Classification of nouns, Noun - Collective nouns, Noun - Concrete nouns and abstract nouns, Noun - Count nouns and mass nouns, Noun - Nouns and pronouns, Noun - Proper nouns and common nouns, Collective number, Name
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Noun - Case number and gender | |
 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Noun - Case number and gender
In sentences, noun phrases may function in a variety of different ways, the most obvious being as subjects (performers of action) or objects (recipients of action). For example, in the sentence "John wrote me a letter", "John" is the subject, and "me" and "letter" are objects (of which "letter" is a noun and "me" a pronoun). These different roles are known as noun cases. Variant forms of the same noun—such as "he" (subject) and ...
See also:Noun, Noun - Nouns and pronouns, Noun - Case number and gender, Noun - Classification of nouns, Noun - Proper nouns and common nouns, Noun - Count nouns and mass nouns, Noun - Collective nouns, Noun - Concrete nouns and abstract nouns Read more here: » Noun: Encyclopedia II - Noun - Case number and gender |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Noun - Case, number, and genderIn sentences, noun phrases may function in a variety of different ways, the most obvious being as subjects (performers of action) or objects (recipients of action). For example, in the sentence "John wrote me a letter", "John" is the subject, and "me" and "letter" are objects (of which "letter" is a noun and "me" a pronoun). These different roles are known as noun cases. Variant forms of the same noun—such as "he" (subject) an ...
See also:Noun, Noun - Case, number, and gender, Noun - Classification of nouns, Noun - Proper nouns and common nouns, Noun - Count nouns and mass nouns, Noun - Collective nouns, Noun - Concrete nouns and abstract nouns, Noun - Nouns and pronouns Read more here: » Noun: Encyclopedia II - Noun - Case, number, and gender |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia - GenderIn a variety of different contexts, gender refers to the masculinity or femininity of words, persons, characteristics, or non-human organisms. The classification into masculine and feminine is analogous to the biological sexes of male and female, often by physical or syntactical analogy, linguistic decay, misunderstandings, societal norms, or personal choice. The nature of this categorisation varies depending on the context. For example, gender can be used to refer to the differences in biological sex betwe ...
Including:
Read more here: » Gender: Encyclopedia - Gender |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia - Ablative case
For the physical process, see ablation.
In linguistics, the ablative case is a noun case found in several languages, including Armenian, Latin, Sanskrit and the Finno-Ugric languages.
The Latin ablative combines the functions of the Indo-European ablative (indicating "from"), instrumental (indicating "with" or "by"), and locative (indicating "in") cases, which merged together in the development of Latin. From these original meanings several others developed, including the ablative of cause (indicating "caused by"), the ablative of time and means (indicating "at the time of", der ...
Including:
Read more here: » Ablative case: Encyclopedia - Ablative case |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Spanish nouns - GenderAll Spanish nouns have one of two grammatical genders: masculine or feminine (mostly conventional, that is, arbitrarily assigned). Most adjectives and pronouns, and all articles and participles, indicate the gender of the noun they reference or modify.
In a sentence like "Large tables are nicer", the Spanish equivalent, Las mesas grandes son más bonitas, must use words according to the gender of the noun. The noun, mesa ("table"), is feminine in Spanish. Therefore, the article (i. e. the word for "the") must be feminine ...
See also:Spanish nouns, Spanish nouns - Gender, Spanish nouns - Types of noun masculine vacillant etc, Spanish nouns - Determining gender from endings, Spanish nouns - Gender of proper nouns names, Spanish nouns - Vestiges of a neutral gender, Spanish nouns - Number, Spanish nouns - Diminutives augmentatives and suffixes, Spanish nouns - Local flavour, Spanish nouns - Other suffixes Read more here: » Spanish nouns: Encyclopedia II - Spanish nouns - Gender |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Spanish nouns - NumberThere are two grammatical numbers: singular and plural. The singular form is the one found in dictionaries (base form). The plural is indicated in most words by adding -s (if the base form ends in a vowel) or -es otherwise. Note that final y in words like rey, though phonetically a vowel, counts as a consonant (rey → reyes).
The masculine gender is used for plural forms of mixed sexes (it is inclusive): los niños, grammatically masculine, may mean "the children" or "the boys". The fe ...
See also:Spanish nouns, Spanish nouns - Gender, Spanish nouns - Types of noun masculine vacillant etc, Spanish nouns - Determining gender from endings, Spanish nouns - Gender of proper nouns names, Spanish nouns - Vestiges of a neutral gender, Spanish nouns - Number, Spanish nouns - Diminutives augmentatives and suffixes, Spanish nouns - Local flavour, Spanish nouns - Other suffixes Read more here: » Spanish nouns: Encyclopedia II - Spanish nouns - Number |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes
Grammatical gender - Agreement.
The most common way in which noun classes are manifested in a language is through gender agreement. To understand gender agreement, consider the sentences "The man is tall" and "The woman is tall". In English, the only word that differs between them is the noun "man/woman", which has a direct semantic association with sexual identity. In Spanish, however, one says "El hombre es alto" and "La mujer es alta", respectively. Not only do the words for "man" and "woman" cha ...
See also:Grammatical gender, Grammatical gender - Types of noun classes, Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes, Grammatical gender - Agreement, Grammatical gender - Morphological marking on nouns, Grammatical gender - Other manifestations, Grammatical gender - Natural Gender and Grammatical Gender, Grammatical gender - Gender agreement and marking of natural gender, Grammatical gender - The role of convention, Grammatical gender - Animals, Grammatical gender - Personal names, Grammatical gender - Noun classes in specific linguistic families, Grammatical gender - Algonquian languages, Grammatical gender - Athabaskan languages, Grammatical gender - Australian Aboriginal languages, Grammatical gender - Caucasian languages, Grammatical gender - Indo-European languages, Grammatical gender - Niger-Congo languages, Grammatical gender - Noun classes in specific languages, Grammatical gender - List of languages without grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - List of languages with grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Two genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Three grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - More than three grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Bibliography Read more here: » Grammatical gender: Encyclopedia II - Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes
Grammatical gender - Agreement.
The most common way in which noun classes are manifested in a language is through gender agreement. To understand gender agreement, consider the sentences "The man is tall" and "The woman is tall". In English, the only word that differs between them is the noun "man/woman", which has a direct semantic association with sexual identity. In Spanish, however, one says "El hombre es alto" and "La mujer es alta", respectively. Not only do the words for "man" and "woman" cha ...
See also:Grammatical gender, Grammatical gender - Types of noun classes, Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes, Grammatical gender - Agreement, Grammatical gender - Morphological marking on nouns, Grammatical gender - Other manifestations, Grammatical gender - Natural gender and grammatical gender, Grammatical gender - Gender agreement and marking of natural gender, Grammatical gender - The role of convention, Grammatical gender - Animals, Grammatical gender - Personal names, Grammatical gender - Noun classes in specific linguistic families, Grammatical gender - Algonquian languages, Grammatical gender - Athabaskan languages, Grammatical gender - Australian Aboriginal languages, Grammatical gender - Caucasian languages, Grammatical gender - Indo-European languages, Grammatical gender - Niger-Congo languages, Grammatical gender - Noun classes in specific languages, Grammatical gender - List of languages without grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - List of languages with grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Two genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Three grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - More than three grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Bibliography Read more here: » Grammatical gender: Encyclopedia II - Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes |
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 |  |  | Noun - Case number and gender: Encyclopedia II - Grammatical gender - Types of noun classesMost Indo-European languages distinguish feminine, masculine and sometimes neuter noun classes. But this system of classification is not universal. The Algonquian languages, for example, classify nouns into animate and inanimate classes. In other languages, both masculine and feminine nouns are considered to be part of a broader noun class of person, either generally, or only in the plural, as in the North Caucasian languages and some Dravidian languages. Other languages, such as the Alamblak language, classify objects b ...
See also:Grammatical gender, Grammatical gender - Types of noun classes, Grammatical gender - Manifestations of noun classes, Grammatical gender - Agreement, Grammatical gender - Morphological marking on nouns, Grammatical gender - Other manifestations, Grammatical gender - Natural gender and grammatical gender, Grammatical gender - Gender agreement and marking of natural gender, Grammatical gender - The role of convention, Grammatical gender - Animals, Grammatical gender - Personal names, Grammatical gender - Noun classes in specific linguistic families, Grammatical gender - Algonquian languages, Grammatical gender - Athabaskan languages, Grammatical gender - Australian Aboriginal languages, Grammatical gender - Caucasian languages, Grammatical gender - Indo-European languages, Grammatical gender - Niger-Congo languages, Grammatical gender - Noun classes in specific languages, Grammatical gender - List of languages without grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - List of languages with grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Two genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Three grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - More than three grammatical genders/noun classes, Grammatical gender - Bibliography Read more here: » Grammatical gender: Encyclopedia II - Grammatical gender - Types of noun classes |
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