المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6563 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
التقدير الكمي لنشاط الإنزيم
2025-04-10
تقدير الإنزيمات
2025-04-10
الشفاء في الطعام المبارك
2025-04-10
الميزان في الغذاء
2025-04-10
اعرف أهمية المعادن للمخ والجسم
2025-04-10
اعرف المقصود بمرض الزهايمر
2025-04-10

تطور الفكر الجيومورفولوجي - الفكر الجيومورفولوجي في العصور القديمة - الانهار والاودية النهرية
4/9/2022
تشبيه الدنيا باللهو واللعب
23-10-2014
الضباب
27-9-2017
زكريا بن محمد أبو عبد الله
3-9-2017
ابتداء الهجرة
تحضير معقدات المركب (NO2BB)
2024-03-17

Types of inflection Number  
  
951   12:01 صباحاً   date: 20-1-2022
Author : Rochelle Lieber
Book or Source : Introducing Morphology
Page and Part : 89-6


Read More
Date: 2023-10-06 845
Date: 2024-02-14 1274
Date: 2023-11-17 1219

Types of inflection

Native speakers of English are often surprised at the kinds of inflection that can be found in languages – English is a language that has relatively little inflection, as languages go. So we’ll start by surveying some of the types of inflection that can be found in the languages of the world.

Number

Perhaps the most familiar inflectional category for speakers of English is number. In English, nouns can be marked as singular or plural:

Although the vast majority of nouns pluralize in English by adding -s (or in terms of sounds, one of the variants [s], [z], or [ǝz]), some nouns form their plurals irregularly. We will return to the issue of regular versus irregular inflections shortly. In English, it is required to mark the plural on nouns in a context in which more than one of that noun is being discussed (I have six beagles). This is not the case in all languages, as our Mandarin Chinese example illustrated.

Some languages distinguish a third category of number in addition to singular and plural. For example, in the Eskimo-Aleut language Yup’ik, nouns inflect not only for singular and plural, but also for what is called dual. This is a number-marking that means ‘two’:

As we’ll see soon, some languages can make the singular/dual/plural distinction on verbs, as well as on nouns.