noun
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Assorted References
- gender
- In gender
…certain part of speech, usually nouns, require the agreement, or concord, through grammatical marking (or inflection), of various other words related to them in a sentence. In languages that exhibit gender, two or more classes of nouns control variation in words of other parts of speech (typically pronouns and adjectives…
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- In gender
- names and appellatives
- In name: Names and appellatives
…river is here a common noun, but its reference is specified by the extralinguistic context of the situation in which the sentence was said. Some names seem to belong more to the category of appellatives than to the category of names like Colorado in “the Colorado River.” For example, names…
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- In name: Names and appellatives
characteristics in
- Abkhazo-Adyghian languages
- In Caucasian languages: Grammatical characteristics
…languages include an extremely simple noun system and a relatively complicated system of verb conjugation. There are no grammatical cases in Abkhaz and Abaza, and in the other languages only two principal cases occur: a direct case (nominative) and an oblique case, combining the functions of several cases—ergative, genitive, dative,…
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- In Caucasian languages: Grammatical characteristics
- Afro-Asiatic languages
- In Afro-Asiatic languages: The nominal system
…masculine and feminine genders in nouns and pronouns (in the second and third person, and both singular and plural) is maintained widely but has been lost in some subdivisions of Chadic and Omotic. In Semitic and Cushitic languages, a noun may change its gender when it changes from singular to…
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- In Afro-Asiatic languages: The nominal system
- Albanian language
- In Albanian language: Grammar
Nouns show overt gender, number, and three or four cases. An unusual feature is that nouns are further inflected obligatorily with suffixes to show definite or indefinite meaning: e.g., bukë ‘bread,’ buka ‘the bread.’ Adjectives—except numerals and certain quantifying expressions—and dependent nouns follow the noun…
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- In Albanian language: Grammar
- Amazigh languages
- In Berber languages: Morphology and grammar
Berber nouns are distinguished by masculine and feminine gender and by two syntactic states, status absolutus and status annexus. Internal plurals are common, a practice demonstrated by the change from the pattern a-u- to i-a- in the root -ghy-l: aghyul ‘donkey’ and ighyal ‘donkeys.’ The suffix…
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- In Berber languages: Morphology and grammar
- Anatolian languages
- In Anatolian languages: Grammatical characteristics
…seven cases—varying forms of the noun that mark its function in a sentence, such as subject, direct object, indirect object, or possessor—in the singular, but these are reduced to five in the later language, and the other Anatolian languages show a similarly simplified system. Suffixes marking cases are inherited from…
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- In Anatolian languages: Grammatical characteristics
- Armenian llanguage
- In Armenian language: Morphology and syntax
The Modern Armenian noun has maintained and even developed this plan, especially in Eastern Armenian, which has the special locative ending -um in its declension. But, in comparison with Old Armenian (where case endings were different in singular and plural), Modern Armenian declension resembles rather the Turkish or…
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- In Armenian language: Morphology and syntax
- Athabaskan languages
- In Athabaskan language family
Nouns are classified by their number, shape, and animacy; for certain types of verbs these characteristics are reflected in the choice of verb stem. For example, Witsuwit’en verb stems include stəy ‘it (animate) lies’; stan ‘it (rigid) is (in position)’; səɬcoz ‘it (clothlike, flexible) is’;…
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- In Athabaskan language family
- Cushitic languages
- In Cushitic languages: Morphology and grammar
Nouns distinguish grammatical cases, of which there may originally have been only two: absolutive and nominative. Nouns also indicate number and gender (masculine and feminine, often semantically re-arranged in terms of augmentative and diminutive). Plural formatives are plentiful. Some Cushitic languages, such as Somali and…
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- In Cushitic languages: Morphology and grammar
- Dravidian languages
- In Dravidian languages: The nominal system
Nouns carry number and gender and are inflected for case (role in the sentence, such as subject, direct object, or indirect object), as are pronouns and numerals, which are subclasses of nouns. As noted above, in most of the languages, adverbs of time and place…
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- In Dravidian languages: The nominal system
- Indo-Aryan languages
- In Indo-Aryan languages: Grammatical modifications
Noun forms incorporated into the verb system are numerous in early Indo-Aryan. Ṛgvedic has forms with affixes -ya and -tva functioning as future passive participles (gerundives)—e.g., vāc-ya- ‘to be said,’ kar-tva- ‘to be done.’ The Atharvaveda has, additionally, forms with -(i)tavya (parentheses indicate optional components…
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- In Indo-Aryan languages: Grammatical modifications
- Indo-European morphology
- In Indo-European languages: Nominal inflection
The inflectional categories of the noun were case, number, and gender. Eight cases can be reconstructed: nominative, for the subject of a verb; accusative, for the direct object; genitive, for the relations expressed by English of; dative, corresponding to the English preposition to, as in “give a prize to the…
Read More - In Indo-European languages: Changes in morphology
In the noun, loss of endings has generally led to loss or great reduction of the case and gender systems, while ways have generally been found to salvage the distinction between singular and plural. In Modern Persian, for example, where all final syllables have been lost, the…
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- In Indo-European languages: Nominal inflection
- Japanese language
- In Japanese language: Syntax
…that concludes a sentence—and the noun-modifying form exhibited by certain predicates. For example, in early Japanese otsu and tsuyoshi were conclusive forms, respectively, of the verb ‘to drop’ and the adjective ‘to be strong.’ When these words were used as noun modifiers, the forms were inflected as otsuru, tsuyoki. The…
Read More - In Japanese language: Grammatical structure
…formation of plurals for certain nouns (e.g., yama-yama ‘mountains,’ hito-bito ‘people’), and the use of doubling in adverbial phrases for emphasis (e.g., hayaku-hayaku ‘quickly, quickly’). Additionally, the repetition of phrases yields a number of characteristic constructions of Japanese—e.g., yome-ba yomu-hodo omoshiroi (literally, read-if read-to-the-extent interesting) ‘the more (I) read, the…
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- In Japanese language: Syntax
- Modern Greek language
- In Greek language: Morphology and syntax
Nouns may be singular or plural—the dual is lost—and all dialects distinguish a nominative (subject) case and accusative (object) case. A noun modifying a second noun is expressed by the genitive case except in the north, where a prepositional phrase is usually preferred. The indirect…
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- In Greek language: Morphology and syntax
- Navajo language
- In Navajo language
Nouns are either animate or inanimate. Animate nouns may be “speakers” (humans) or “callers” (plants and animals); inanimate nouns may be corporeal or spiritual. The Navajo fourth person is a grammatical category that enables the speaker to address someone who is present or within hearing…
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- In Navajo language
- Semitic languages
- In Semitic languages: The stem: root and pattern analysis
Among basic nouns, for example, the pattern of the word seldom has any identifiable grammatical value; observe the varying syllable structures and vocalization patterns of Arabic kalb- ‘dog’ and bn- ‘son,’ in which decomposition along root-pattern lines (e.g., taking the stem kalb- to consist of a root…
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- In Semitic languages: The stem: root and pattern analysis
- Slavic languages
- In Slavic languages: Noun forms
The declension of pronouns has been preserved in all Slavic languages. Old combinations of adjectives with pronouns gave rise to the definite forms of adjectives (e.g., feminine dobra-ja ‘good-the’). Such forms still contrast with the indefinite forms in South Slavic, but in the…
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- In Slavic languages: Noun forms
- South American Indian languages
- In South American Indian languages: Grammatical characteristics
…word roots are nominal (nouns) or verbal (verbs) and may be converted into the other class by derivational affixes; in languages like Quechua or Araucanian, many word roots are both nominal and verbal. Languages like Yuracare form many words by reduplication (the repetition of a word or a part…
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- In South American Indian languages: Grammatical characteristics
- Sumerian language
- In Sumerian language: Characteristics
In the noun, gender was not expressed. Plural number was indicated either by the suffixes -me (or -me + esh), -hia, and -ene, or by reduplication, as in kur + kur “mountains.” The relational forms of the noun, corresponding approximately to the cases of the Latin declension,…
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- In Sumerian language: Characteristics
- Tagalog language
- In Austronesian languages: Verb systems
…of the above sentences one noun is marked as being in focus. Focused personal nouns (proper names or common nouns that can be used as proper names, such as ‘Mother’ or ‘Father’) are preceded by si. Focused common nouns are preceded by ang, and the combination is commonly called the…
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- In Austronesian languages: Verb systems
- Tocharian languages
- In Tocharian languages: Linguistic characteristics
The noun shows less of its Indo-European origins. However, it preserves three numbers (singular, dual, and plural) and traces at least of the nominative, accusative, genitive, vocative, and ablative cases. Most of the attested cases are built up by the addition of postpositions to the oblique…
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- In Tocharian languages: Linguistic characteristics