Possessive
101Portuguese personal pronouns — The Portuguese personal pronouns and possessives display a higher degree of inflection than other parts of speech. Personal pronouns have distinct forms according to whether they stand for a subject (nominative), a direct object (accusative), an… …
102Saxon genitive — In English language teaching, the term Saxon genitive is used to associate the possessive use of the apostrophe (the commonly termed apostrophe s ) with the historical origin in Anglo Saxon (also known as Old English) of the morpheme that it… …
103Gerund — In linguistics[1] As applied to English, it refers to the usage of a verb (in its ing form) as a noun (for example, the verb learning in the sentence Learning is an easy process for some ).[2] As applied to French, it refers either to the… …
104Oromo language — Oromo Afaan Oromo, Oromiffa Spoken in  Ethiopia …
105'S — abbr. 1 is, has (he s; it s; John s; Charles s). 2 us (let s). 3 colloq. does (what s he say?). * * * I. like ʸs verb Etymology: contraction of is, has, does 1 …
106HEBREW LANGUAGE — This entry is arranged according to the following scheme: pre biblical biblical the dead sea scrolls mishnaic medieval modern period A detailed table of contents precedes each section. PRE BIBLICAL nature of the evidence the sources phonology… …
107Grammatical case — Grammatical categories Animacy Aspect Case Clusivity Definiteness Degree of comparison Evidentiality …
108Romance languages — Romance Geographic distribution: Originally Southern Europe and parts of Africa; now also Latin America, Canada, parts of Lebanon and much of Western Africa Linguistic classification: Indo European Italic …
109Brazilian Portuguese — (Portuguese: português brasileiro or português do Brasil; pt BR) is a group of Portuguese dialects written and spoken by most of the 190 million inhabitants[1] of Brazil and by a few million Brazilian emigrants, mainly in the United States,… …
110Slovene pronouns — Substantival Pronoun= Substantival pronouns can replace a noun in a sentence; this is, as opposed to, say, an adjective or an adverb.Personal PronounA personal pronoun denotes the speaker ( I ), the addressee ( you ) or a third person ( it ).… …