uninflected

  • 111Lemma (morphology) — In morphology and lexicography, a lemma (plural lemmas or lemmata) is the canonical form, dictionary form, or citation form of a set of words (headword). In English, for example, run, runs, ran and running are forms of the same lexeme, with run… …

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  • 112North–South differences in the Korean language — There are a small number of differences in the standard forms of the Korean language used in the Democratic People s Republic of Korea (North Korea; hereafter the North ) and the Republic of Korea (South Korea; hereafter the South ), due to the… …

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  • 113Marra language — Not to be confused with the Maran languages of the Pama–Nyungan family Marra Spoken in Australia Region Arnhem Land, Northern Territory Native speakers 15  (1991) Language family …

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  • 114Minimal music — This article is about a musical style. For other uses, see Minimalism (disambiguation). Minimal music Stylistic origins Experimental music, twelve tone music, serialism, process music, Indian classical music Cultural origins United States Typical …

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  • 115Na'vi language — Na’vi Lì’fya leNa’vi Pronunciation ˈnaʔvi Created by Paul Frommer Date created 2005 Sett …

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  • 116Northern Bavarian — Northern Austro Bavarian Nordboarisch Spoken in Germany Region Upper Palatinate, Upper Franconia, Upper Bavaria, Lower Bavaria Language family …

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  • 117Old Norse morphology — This article is part of a series on: Old Norse Dialects …

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  • 118of, off — Until a few centuries ago, of and off represented different pronunciations of the same word. Today, of has a basic meaning of derived or coming from, whereas off means at or to a distance from a nearer place, no longer attached or supported. In… …

    Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • 119hæleþ — hæleþ2 m ( es/ , as) man, hero, fighter [alt pl uninflected] …

    Old to modern English dictionary

  • 120decline — [14] The notion underlying decline is of ‘bending away’. It comes via Old French decliner from Latin dēclināre ‘turn aside, go down’, a compound verb formed from the prefix dē , ‘away, aside’ and clināre ‘bend’, which also produced English… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins