endingrakennetta
Endingrakennetta is a term used in linguistics to describe the inflectional architecture of a word as determined by its endings. It denotes the system of suffixes or postposed morphemes that mark grammatical categories such as case, number, tense, mood, aspect, and agreement. The concept focuses on endings as carriers of grammatical information, rather than on the stem or word order alone, and is central to the analysis of inflected languages and cross-linguistic typology.
In descriptive grammars, researchers study endingrakennetta to understand how a language encodes syntactic relations and semantic
Endings can form in different morphological patterns: in some languages they are concatenated as suffix chains
Historically, endingrakennetta often reflects diachronic sound changes, mergers, or reanalysis, and may shift under language contact
Related topics include inflection, morphology, allomorphy, agreement, case systems, verb conjugation, noun declension, and syntactic alignment.