suppletions
Suppletions, or suppletion, is a linguistic phenomenon in which the forms of a word in different grammatical contexts come from distinct roots rather than a single, regular stem. In a suppletive paradigm, surface forms show little or no phonological or etymological relation to one another, so inflected forms cannot be predicted by applying regular sound changes to a single base.
The phenomenon is most visible in verb inflection. Classic English examples include be, with am, is, are,
Types of suppletion can be full or partial. Full suppletion replaces the stem for certain forms, while
In linguistic analysis, suppletion is treated as irregular lexical data: sentences and inflection tables may record