| 1. | Generally it is the final syllable containing the inflectional ending is written phonetically.
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| 2. | Various compound tense-aspect-moods occur by doubling up the inflectional endings.
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| 3. | Some of the inflectional endings for the genitive were replaced with those of the former ablative.
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| 4. | The consonant clusters in the inflectional endings and, cognate with Standard English, changed to in Early Scots.
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| 5. | Grammatically, the language is agglutinating, with nouns and verbs showing suffixed inflectional endings and ablaut in some cases.
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| 6. | In total, seven inflectional endings ( not counting plural markers ) exist in German : " ".
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| 7. | Inflectional endings are obligatory; interestingly, there is no " null ) inflectional ending for either class of words.
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| 8. | Inflectional endings are obligatory; interestingly, there is no " null ) inflectional ending for either class of words.
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| 9. | Their inflections may be irregular or have different inflectional endings from those of lexical verbs, which are as follows:
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| 10. | Normally the Latin or Greek inflectional ending is replaced with the Esperanto inflectional ending " " o ."
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