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deklinierenden

Deklinierenden is the inflected form of the German adjective deklinierend, which is derived from the verb deklinieren (to decline or to inflect). In grammar, deklinierend refers to something that shows inflection, i.e., that changes form to reflect case, number, or gender. The participle form deklinierend can function as an adjective, describing words or forms that undergo declension.

The word deklinierenden appears mainly in descriptive or linguistic contexts. It is not a separate lexical

In practice, the term is used when discussing German noun, pronoun, or adjective inflection, as well as

See also: Deklination, Adjektivdeklination, Partizip I, Flexion.

item
with
its
own
meaning
beyond
being
an
inflected
form
of
deklinierend.
In
usage,
it
typically
occurs
as
an
attributive
adjective
before
a
plural
noun,
for
example
die
deklinierenden
Endungen
(the
inflecting
endings).
The
ending
-en
in
this
form
indicates
a
plural
context
with
a
definite
article
or
other
determiner
that
triggers
the
weak
or
mixed
declension
pattern.
Without
a
determiner,
the
form
would
adapt
according
to
the
rules
of
strong
or
mixed
declension
for
adjectives
in
German.
broader
concepts
of
grammatical
morphology
and
flexion.
It
highlights
the
characteristic
that
certain
elements
of
language
change
their
form
to
signal
grammatical
relationships,
a
central
feature
of
Deklination
and
Adjektivdeklination
in
German
grammar.