View example sentences and word forms for Conjugations.
Conjugations meaning
plural of conjugation
Example sentences (20)
Conjugations or verbal stems Like other Semitic languages, Aramaic employs a number of conjugations, or verbal stems, to extend the lexical coverage of verbs.
Conjugations There are four conjugations in Latin which define patterns of verb inflection.
Periphrastic conjugations There are two periphrastic conjugations.
Verbs came in nine main conjugations (seven strong and two weak), each with numerous subtypes, as well as a few additional smaller conjugations and a handful of irregular verbs.
A conjugation is "a class of verbs with similar inflected forms." citation The conjugations are identified by the last letter of the verb's present stem.
Code Mixing also entails the use of foreign words that are Filipinized by reforming them using Filipino rules, such as verb conjugations.
Coeurdoux made a thorough comparison of Sanskrit, Latin and Greek conjugations in the late 1760s to suggest a relationship among them.
For example, Latin is said to have four conjugations of verbs.
For this reason, hiragana are suffixed to the ends of kanji to show verb and adjective conjugations.
In Italian, the two infinitive endings remained separate (but spelled identically), while the conjugations merged in most other respects much as in the other languages.
In Proto-Semitic, as still largely reflected in East Semitic, prefix conjugations are used both for the past and the non-past, with different vocalizations.
In the case of groups, the inner automorphisms are the conjugations by the elements of the group itself.
Medieval conjugations were much closer.
Most Latin verbs belong to one of the four verb conjugations, though some, like esse (to be), do not.
Not all verbs utilise all of these conjugations, and, in some, the G-stem is not used.
Note that this clitic form is only for the verb ser and is restricted to only third-person singular conjugations.
Romanian has four verbal conjugations which further split into ten conjugation patterns.
Shared with neither *Latin -B- is maintained in past imperfect endings of verbs of the second and third conjugations: teneba, teniba main ("he had", Sp. tenía main, Cat. tenia main), dormiba main ("he was sleeping", Sp. dormía main, Cat. dormia main).
Suffix conjugations take suffixes indicating the person, number and gender of the subject, which bear some resemblance to the pronominal suffixes used to indicate direct objects on verbs ("I saw him") and possession on nouns ("his dog").
Syriac also employs verb conjugations such as are present in other Semitic languages.