- Proto-Celtic, plus
another moribund type. The s-preterite The
reduplicated suffixless preterite (originating from the PIE
reduplicated stative) The t-preterite...
- of the
suffix was
normally -d-, but the
class 1 j-present verbs, the
suffixless weak
verbs and the preterite-present
verbs had -t- if the
ending consonant...
- not
named Huseyn. Much like
Turkish names Azerbaijani law also
accepts suffixless surnames,
exceptions are
surnames including noble titles like Agha, Khan...
- memorized. Two
kinds of non-past
endings are irregular, both in the "
suffixless"
parts of the
paradigm (largely
referring to
singular masculine or singular...
-
changed (such as the
addition of -a). In the
Czech Republic and Slovakia,
suffixless names, such as
those of
German origin, are
feminized by
adding -ová (for...
- (preterite lod-) "to go" for the
absolute suffixless preterite, and do·icc "to reach" for the
conjunct suffixless formation are
listed in the
below table...
- live in the town".
Imperatives in the
second person singular are also
suffixless, e.g. Siik! "Come!" One verb, taak "go", has a
suppletive imperative mang...
- and
household members. This
included works like
kiier from the
original suffixless Old
Frisian term kī, as well as
others such as
laumer ('lambs'), hingster...