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单词 declension
释义

declension


declension

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de·clen·sion

D0076500 (dĭ-klĕn′shən)n.1. Linguistics a. In certain languages, the inflection of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives with respect to categories such as case, number, and gender.b. A class of words of one language with the same or a similar system of inflections, such as the first declension in Latin.2. A descending slope; a descent.3. A decline or decrease; deterioration: "States and empires have their periods of declension" (Laurence Sterne).4. A deviation, as from a standard or practice.
[Middle English declenson, from Old French declinaison, from Latin dēclīnātiō, dēclīnātiōn-, grammatical declension, declination; see declination.]
de·clen′sion·al adj.

declension

(dɪˈklɛnʃən) n1. (Grammar) grammar a. the inflection of nouns, pronouns, or adjectives for case, number, and genderb. the complete set of the inflections of such a word: "puella" is a first-declension noun in Latin. 2. a decline or deviation from a standard, belief, etc3. a downward slope or bend[C15: from Latin dēclīnātiō, literally: a bending aside, hence variation, inflection; see decline] deˈclensional adj deˈclensionally adv

de•clen•sion

(dɪˈklɛn ʃən)

n. 1. a. the inflection of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives for categories such as case and number. b. the whole set of inflected forms of such a word, or the recital thereof in a fixed order. c. a class of such words having similar sets of inflected forms: the Latin second declension. 2. a bending, sloping, or moving downward. 3. deterioration; decline. [1400–50; < Old French declinaison < Latin dēclīnātiō declination] de•clen′sion•al, adj.

declension

An inflection or set of inflections for a noun, pronoun, or adjective.
Thesaurus
Noun1.declension - the inflection of nouns and pronouns and adjectives in Indo-European languagesnoun - the word class that can serve as the subject or object of a verb, the object of a preposition, or in appositioninflection, inflexion - a change in the form of a word (usually by adding a suffix) to indicate a change in its grammatical function
2.declension - process of changing to an inferior statedecline in quality, worsening, deteriorationdecline, diminution - change toward something smaller or lowerdrop-off, falling off, falloff, slump, slack - a noticeable deterioration in performance or quality; "the team went into a slump"; "a gradual slack in output"; "a drop-off in attendance"; "a falloff in quality"
3.declension - a downward slope or benddeclivity, downslope, declination, decline, fall, descentdownhill - the downward slope of a hillincline, slope, side - an elevated geological formation; "he climbed the steep slope"; "the house was built on the side of a mountain"steep - a steep place (as on a hill)
4.declension - a class of nouns or pronouns or adjectives in Indo-European languages having the same (or very similar) inflectional forms; "the first declension in Latin"category, class, family - a collection of things sharing a common attribute; "there are two classes of detergents"

declension

nounDescent to a lower level or condition:atrophy, decadence, declination, decline, degeneracy, degeneration, deterioration.
Translations

declension


declension

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declension:

see inflectioninflection,
in grammar. In many languages, words or parts of words are arranged in formally similar sets consisting of a root, or base, and various affixes. Thus walking, walks, walker have in common the root walk and the affixes -ing, -s, and -er.
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Declension

 

inflection of a noun, pronoun, or nonfinite verb form by case. Case meanings are expressed in all languages, but not all languages have declensions. In languages with declensions, case meanings acquire a regular morphological expression—as part of a word form—that is obligatory for all or most words. Languages also have certain indeclinable words, such as pal’to (“overcoat”), Dante (“Dante”), and Chili (“Chile”) in Russian.

The grammatical content of declension varies with the morphological type of a language. In inflected languages, case inflections express not only case meaning but also the grammatical category of number; the grammatical category of gender is often expressed as well. For example, the ending -ōrum in the Latin word librōrum (“of books”) combines the meanings of genitive case, plural number, and masculine gender. In agglutinative languages, case markers express only case meanings. The declensional system in many languages is not uniform even for a particular part of speech.

Indo-European languages have several types of nominal declensions, which depend on characteristics of the stem. In the comparative historical grammar of the Indo-European languages, and especially the Slavic languages, the declensional type is determined by the characteristics of vocalic and consonantal stems: a-stem, o-stem, n-stem, s-stem, and so on. Declensions can also be differentiated according to the forms of certain principal cases. In Latin, for example, declensions are distinguished according to forms of the genitive singular, the first declension having -ae, the second declension having -ī, and so forth. Certain groups of words belong to a mixed declension, in which paradigms of various declensions are combined.

In the course of time, a declensional system may be simplified and made regular. In Russian, for example, the rich older system of substantival declension was replaced by a system of three basic types—called the first, second, and third declensions—whose differentiation is related to gender distinctions and for which the principal form is that of the nominative singular: dom (“house,” first declension), voda (“water,” second declension), and noch’ (“night,” third declension).

In certain languages, declension has been lost entirely. It may be noted that the system collapses more rapidly for nouns than for pronouns. In English and French, for example, nouns are not declined, whereas pronouns have preserved two case forms, one combining the functions of various oblique cases, as with the English “I” and “me” and the French je and me. The loss of declension reflects the development in a language of analytic means for expressing grammatical meanings, as a result of which the role of case inflections is taken over by prepositions, articles, and other auxiliary words.

REFERENCES

Meillet, A. Vvedenie v sravnitel’noe izuchenie indoevropeiskikh iazykov, 3rd ed. Moscow-Leningrad, 1938. (Translated from French.)
Zalizniak, A. A. Russkoe imennoe slovoizmenenie. Moscow, 1967.
Vinogradov, V. V. Russkii iazyk, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1973.

V. A. VINOGRADOV

MedicalSeeinflection

declension


  • noun

Synonyms for declension

noun descent to a lower level or condition

Synonyms

  • atrophy
  • decadence
  • declination
  • decline
  • degeneracy
  • degeneration
  • deterioration

Synonyms for declension

noun the inflection of nouns and pronouns and adjectives in Indo-European languages

Related Words

  • noun
  • inflection
  • inflexion

noun process of changing to an inferior state

Synonyms

  • decline in quality
  • worsening
  • deterioration

Related Words

  • decline
  • diminution
  • drop-off
  • falling off
  • falloff
  • slump
  • slack

noun a downward slope or bend

Synonyms

  • declivity
  • downslope
  • declination
  • decline
  • fall
  • descent

Related Words

  • downhill
  • incline
  • slope
  • side
  • steep

noun a class of nouns or pronouns or adjectives in Indo-European languages having the same (or very similar) inflectional forms

Related Words

  • category
  • class
  • family
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