personformregler
Personformregler (literally “person-form rules”) is a term used in linguistic descriptions to refer to the rules that determine how verb and pronoun forms reflect the grammatical person (first, second, third) and number (singular, plural) of the subject. These rules shape how a language marks agreement between the subject and its predicate and, in some cases, how pronouns are chosen for different grammatical roles.
Across languages, personformregler vary in how explicitly they mark person. In many Romance languages, verb endings
Personformregler interact with broader grammar, including tense, aspect, and mood, and may involve irregular forms, suppletion,
In summary, personformregler describe how languages encode who is performing an action and how many such performers