- the
instrumental case. When made from an
intransitive (akarmaka) or
neuter verb, the same
participle has no p****ive, but an
indefinite past sense: rāmo...
- ("[female] stranger"); dēadlīċ ("mortal"), dēadlīcu ("[female] mortal").
Verbs are
neuter when used as nouns.
Since gender is noun-specific and
ultimately a...
-
gender divisions include masculine and feminine; masculine, feminine, and
neuter; or
animate and inanimate.
Depending on the
language and the word, this...
-
verbs. It is
generally a subject–
verb–object (SVO)
language with V2 word order.
Nouns have one of two
grammatical genders:
common (utrum) and
neuter (neutrum)...
- is the
system of
conjugation (grammatically-determined modifications) of
verbs in Czech.
Czech is a null-subject language, i.e. the
subject (including...
-
still understood.
Sentences formed from
certain verbs that can
appear (in third-person
singular neuter form)
without a subject,
corresponding to an English...
- "auxiliary" but says: All
other verbs are
called verbs-
neuters-un-perfect
because they
require the
infinitive mood of
another verb to
express their signification...
- is a
neuter noun. They all have to
agree with the
determinative nokon in
gender and number. As in
other continental Scandinavian languages,
verb conjugation...
- can also
undergo this change.
feminine singular: -ла
neuter singular: -ло plural: -ли
class 2
verbs can have
forms without the -ну, for example, заслабнути...
- (singular and plural), and
grammatical gender (masculine, feminine, and
neuter). Up to ten
additional cases are
identified in
linguistics textbooks, although...