Grammatilliset
Grammatilliset is a Finnish-language term used in linguistics to refer to grammatical features and categories that encode information about how words relate to one another in sentences. The concept covers morphology and syntax that express tense, aspect, mood, number, case, person, definiteness, agreement, voice, and evidentiality, among others. Grammatical information is typically conveyed through inflection, affixes, clitics, or auxiliary words, as opposed to lexical meaning carried by content words.
In linguistic descriptions, grammatilliset categories are analyzed as part of a language’s morphosyntax. Languages vary widely
Finnish, as an example, illustrates extensive grammatical marking. Nouns decline for number and multiple cases; adjectives
See also: grammar, morphology, syntax, grammatical category, language typology. Etymology: Grammatilliset derives from the Finnish word