Normally the Latin or Greek inflectional ending is replaced with the Esperanto inflectional ending " " o ."
12.
It is not applied for inflectional endings except in a few exceptional cases, but it is retained more frequently in derivational endings.
13.
Some of them stood for frequent letter combinations, some for inflectional endings of words, and some were abbreviations of entire words.
14.
Its final voiceless consonant is unique, where normally only " * z " appears word-finally in inflectional endings.
15.
Each suffix or inflectional ending triggers either the strong grade or weak grade, and this inherent in that particular suffix or ending.
16.
In native Finnic vocabulary, this occurs where inflectional endings beginning with are attached to words with a stem ending in a nonpalatalized consonant.
17.
This tonal shift also occurs when the adjective gets an inflectional ending, as in " nen gie�len appel ( " a yellow apple " ).
18.
Note also that the inflectional endings mean it is not necessary to include the subject pronoun, except for emphasis, or to avoid ambiguity in complex sentences.
19.
Whiting refers to the specific dropping of the final n, indicative of the loss of inflectional endings from Old to Middle English ( Whiting, 89 ).
20.
Semantic work that used to be done by inflectional endings or vowel mutations is now mostly done by word order and the addition of auxiliary verbs and particles.