stronginflected
Stronginflected is a term used in linguistic typology to describe languages in which grammatical meaning is encoded primarily through inflection rather than fixed word order or auxiliary words. It denotes a high density of inflectional morphology, with substantial variation across word classes and many productive affixes.
Core features include extensive case systems for nouns and pronouns; verb conjugations marking person, number, tense,
The concept is not a strict, universally standardized category; languages may be strongly inflected yet differ
Examples commonly cited as strongly inflected include Latin, Sanskrit, Russian, Finnish, Hungarian, and Icelandic. Other languages
In research and computational linguistics, stronginflected descriptions support morphology-aware parsing, lexical resources, and corpus annotation. See