inflect

  • 61Chara language — Chara sʼaːra[1] Spoken in Ethiopia Native speakers 13,100  (2007 census) …

    Wikipedia

  • 62decline — decliner, n. /di kluyn /, v., declined, declining, n. v.t. 1. to withhold or deny consent to do, enter into or upon, etc.; refuse: He declined to say more about it. 2. to express inability or reluctance to accept; refuse with courtesy: to decline …

    Universalium

  • 63inflection — inflectionless, adj. /in flek sheuhn/, n. 1. modulation of the voice; change in pitch or tone of voice. 2. Also, flection. Gram. a. the process or device of adding affixes to or changing the shape of a base to give it a different syntactic… …

    Universalium

  • 64Deena Larsen — (born 1964) is a new media, hypertext author, known for ground breaking work in creating structural patterns in hypermedia literature. Larsen has been working with electronic literature since the 1980s and is considered one of the pioneer artists …

    Wikipedia

  • 65Mavea language — Mavea Spoken in Vanuatu Region Mafea Island Native speakers approx. 34  (date missing) Language family Austronesian …

    Wikipedia

  • 66verb — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ plural, singular ▪ intransitive, transitive ▪ active, passive ▪ irregular, regular …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 67noun — n. 1) to decline, inflect a noun 2) an abstract; attributive; collective; common; count; mass, uncountable; predicate; proper; verbal noun 3) a feminine; masculine; neuter noun * * * [naʊn] attributive collective common count inflect a noun …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 68verb — n. 1) to conjugate, inflect; passivize a verb 2) an auxiliary, helping; compound, phrasal; copular (esp. BE), copulative, linking; defective; irregular; main; modal; regular; strong; weak verb 3) an active; passive verb 4) an intransitive;… …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 69change — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Alteration Nouns 1. change, alteration, mutation, permutation, variation, modification, modulation, innovation, metastasis; transition; menopause; deviation, flux, turn; shift; diversion, break; reform,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 70reflect — [15] To reflect something is etymologically to ‘bend it back’. The word comes via Old French reflecter from Latin reflectere ‘bend back’, a compound verb formed from the prefix re ‘back’ and flectere ‘bend’ (source also of English deflect [17],… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins