Home

nounending

Nounending is a term used in linguistics to refer to the final part of a noun that carries grammatical information. In many languages, nouns are marked with endings—suffixes, infixes, or final vowels—that indicate properties such as case, number, gender, definiteness, or noun class. The study of noun endings falls under nominal morphology and declension.

The distribution and complexity of noun endings vary widely. Some languages have rich systems of declension

Common functions include marking case (nominative, accusative, genitive), number (singular, plural), and sometimes gender or noun

Noun endings are important for linguistic analysis, language learning, and natural language processing. They influence syntax,

In constructed languages or typological surveys, nounending schemes are often designed to be regular, to illustrate

with
many
endings,
while
others
rely
more
on
word
order
or
articles.
For
example,
Latin
and
Russian
use
extensive
case
endings
on
nouns,
Finnish
marks
a
large
number
of
cases,
and
Turkish
uses
agglutinative
suffixes
to
express
a
chain
of
grammatical
relations.
English
largely
uses
noun
endings
only
for
number
(the
plural
-s)
and
possessive
forms,
while
other
grammatical
relations
are
signaled
by
function
words.
class.
In
some
languages,
definiteness
or
animacy
is
encoded
in
endings,
and
adjectives
and
determiners
may
change
to
agree
with
the
noun's
ending.
Ending
patterns
can
be
regular
or
irregular
and
may
interact
with
stem
changes.
meaning,
and
agreement,
and
can
pose
challenges
for
automated
parsing,
especially
in
languages
with
many
irregular
forms
or
vowel
harmony.
particular
grammatical
concepts,
or
to
shape
sentence
structure.