Declension
Revision as of 05:55, 3 December 2007 by Khaled Albahri (talk | contribs)
Declension
The inflectional class of nouns is called a declension. For example, a group of nouns belonging to the same noun class and displaying similar inflectional patterns are said to be declined or belong to the same declension. Latin is the prototypical example of a language that uses declensions, as it has five different declensions categorized by case suffixes and gender. The following examples are taken from Latin and display two words belonging to First declension, which usually contains feminine nouns. Please note that the macrons are omitted in these examples:
insula "island"
Nominative | insula | insulae | |
Genitive | insulae | insularum | |
Dative | insulae | insulis | |
Accusative | insulam | insulas | |
Ablative | insula | insulis |
filia "daughter"
Nominative | filia | filiae | |
Genitive | filiae | filiarum | |
Dative | filiae | filiabus | |
Accusative | filiam | filias | |
Ablative | filia | filiabus |