Zusammenfassung der Ressource
NOUN
- GENDER
- Every noun
belongs to one
of these 3
genres
- Femenine
- Have not yet
considered the
General
Feminine
declension
nouns.
- Because they have
somewhat
different shape,
historically.
- eg: Nom.
singular : talu
plural: tala
- Masculine
- All nouns which share
that paradigm are said to
belong to a particular
declension.
- We can give a name to
this declension for ease
of reference.
- eg: wifmann,
- Neutral
- neuters have -e
in the accusative
singular
- NUMBER
- singular and plural
- Gender
- Masculine
- Nominative/Dative
Plurals end in “-as”
- Femenine
- Only has Dative Singular/Plural
and Genitive Plural in common
with Masculine and Neuter words
- Neuter
- Nominative/Accusative Plurals
end in “-u”
- Declension
- General Neuter
Declension
- sċip
- N Declension
- Guma - guman
- General
Masculine
Declension
- stān
- wyrm
- CASE
- They acquire different ending depending
of the function that it will use in nouns
and subject
- Present-day
English
- Use complex syntactic
structure
- Old
English
- Gives flexibility that has now
been lost
- There exist 4
types of case
- Nominative
- Equites to the
subject
- Ex.
Singular:
sċip
Plural:
sċipu
- Accusative
- Equites to the
object
- Ex.
Singular:
sċip
Plural:
sċipu
- Genitive
- Is the similar to
the present-day
English
- To know that
is possessive
- Ex.
Singular:
sċipes
Plural:
sċipa
- Dative
- Use it as
indirect object
- Ex.
Singular:
sċipe
Plural:
sċipum