Glommish/Middle: Difference between revisions
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{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! rowspan="2" | | ! rowspan="2" | | ||
! colspan="4" | ''''' | ! colspan="4" | '''''dag; dagar ''<br> day m. | ||
! colspan="4" | ''''' | ! colspan="4" | '''''wurd; wurda''<br> word | ||
|- | |- | ||
! colspan="2" | '''Singular''' | ! colspan="2" | '''Singular''' | ||
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*The situation with long-stemmed dissyllabic nouns ending in '''-al''', '''-ar''' and '''-an''' is the same as for the corresponding masculines, e.g. nominative '''zwīfal''' "doubt", genitive '''zwīfles'''. | *The situation with long-stemmed dissyllabic nouns ending in '''-al''', '''-ar''' and '''-an''' is the same as for the corresponding masculines, e.g. nominative '''zwīfal''' "doubt", genitive '''zwīfles'''. | ||
*Diminutives in '''-īn''' and '''-līn''', e.g. '''magatīn''' "little maid" (neuter!), '''fingarlīn''' "little finger", are declined the same except in the [[Upper German]] dialects. In those dialects, final '''-n''' is dropped in the nominative and accusative, and furthermore in [[Alemannic German|Allemannic]] the nominative and accusative plural end in '''-iu'''. | *Diminutives in '''-īn''' and '''-līn''', e.g. '''magatīn''' "little maid" (neuter!), '''fingarlīn''' "little finger", are declined the same except in the [[Upper German]] dialects. In those dialects, final '''-n''' is dropped in the nominative and accusative, and furthermore in [[Alemannic German|Allemannic]] the nominative and accusative plural end in '''-iu'''. | ||
===The -ja declension=== | ===The -ja declension=== | ||
This declension was really just the '''-a''' declension with a '''j''' immediately preceding. However, due to various sound laws, a new declension subcategory has arisen that does not exactly follow the form of the plain '''-a''' declension. Similar developments occurred in Greek and the Slavic languages, among others. | This declension was really just the '''-a''' declension with a '''j''' immediately preceding. However, due to various sound laws, a new declension subcategory has arisen that does not exactly follow the form of the plain '''-a''' declension. Similar developments occurred in Greek and the Slavic languages, among others. | ||