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Uninflected

Uninflected is a linguistic term used to describe words or languages that do not change form to express grammatical categories such as case, number, gender, tense, mood, or aspect. In a strict sense, an uninflected form remains invariant across contexts, while a language described as uninflected tends to rely on word order, particles, or separate words to convey grammatical relations.

The term is often applied in typology to contrast with inflected languages, which modify word forms as

In practice, most languages exhibit some degree of inflection or have subcategories of uninflected words. For

The concept is primarily a descriptive tool in linguistic typology and historic grammar. It informs discussions

a
core
means
of
signaling
meaning.
Analytic
or
isolating
languages
are
commonly
described
as
uninflected,
because
they
use
little
or
no
affixation.
Examples
frequently
cited
include
Mandarin
Chinese,
Vietnamese,
Thai,
Indonesian,
and
Malay.
In
these
languages,
nouns
seldom
take
inflection
for
number,
and
verbs
generally
do
not
conjugate
for
tense
or
aspect;
grammatical
relations
are
indicated
by
particles,
prepositions,
or
sentence
structure
rather
than
internal
word
changes.
instance,
many
languages
have
adjectives
or
pronouns
that
do
not
change
for
number
or
gender,
even
if
other
parts
of
the
lexicon
do.
Thus,
uninflected
can
describe
a
predominant
morphological
pattern
rather
than
an
absolute
property
of
every
word.
of
how
languages
encode
meaning,
influence
learning
and
processing,
and
shape
computational
approaches
to
parsing
and
lemmatization.