The active participle and comparative only have a weak declension and are in masculine and neuter modelled after the weak nouns with roots in-an-stems, but in feminine and plural modelled after the weak nouns with roots in-in-stems.
12.
The terms " strong declension " and " weak declension " are primarily relevant to well-known dependent-marking languages ( such as the Indo-European languages, or San Carlos dialect ), the postposition "-k? "'on'is inflected for person and number with prefixes.
13.
:: I hadn't noticed the addition of German, and the external link is very good, but the established term in this case is " weak " and not " weak position " ( cf . " weak declension ", " weak ending ", " weak form ", " weak article / adjective / noun " ), and it is already treated ( or should be ) in articles like Declension and German articles.