Wiktionary Appendix: Declensions
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English, Modern
Czech
Feminine nouns
English, Old
Gothic
Greek, Ancient
- Greek first declension
- Greek second declension
- Greek third declension
Latin
- Latin first declension
- Latin second declension
- Latin third declension
- Latin fourth declension
- Latin fifth declension
Polish
- Feminine declension:
- Masculine declension.
- Regular. There is lot of variance of masculine forms and it's impossible to clearly divide them into a few declension groups. Here they are divided by gender - accusative is always equal to nominative in inanimate masculine gender, to genitive in personal masculine gender, and to genitive in singular and nominative in plural in animate masculine gender.
- Polish personal masculine noun declension
- Animate masculine noun declension
- Inanimate masculine noun declension
- Regular. There is lot of variance of masculine forms and it's impossible to clearly divide them into a few declension groups. Here they are divided by gender - accusative is always equal to nominative in inanimate masculine gender, to genitive in personal masculine gender, and to genitive in singular and nominative in plural in animate masculine gender.
Slovak
Slovak has three genders, each having four regular declensions for nouns and many exceptions. The exceptions are named patterns (vzory in Slovak). Rather than being numbered, they are simply referred to by the respective pattern word. Additional declensions exist for adjective and pronouns.
Masculine Nouns
Animate
Inanimate
Feminine Nouns
Neuter Nouns
- mesto
- srdce
- vysvedčenie
- dievča