Uninflected verbs retain the same spellings in all tenses, except in the progressive form.
I don't know. Search it up
A finite verb is a verb that is inflected for person and for tense according to the rules and categories of the languages in which it occurs. Finite verbs can form independent clauses, which can stand by their own as complete sentences.
Leaden. One of few remaining "inflected" words in the English language. Other similar words are golden and oaken. Using these words without the inflection "en" is also acceptable.
I think you mean inflected... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflection#Examples_in_English
Rubble is the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up. This word is never inflected for plural. It's customary to indicate its plural form with the measure word "piles of," as in "piles of rubble." (Grammarians call words that are invariably singular in form "singulare tantum")
form of the verb not inflected for grammatical categories such as tense and person and used without an overt subject. In English, the infinitive usually consists of the word to followed by the verb
In English adjectives are not inflected.
An inflected language is a type of language where words change form to indicate different grammatical relationships, such as tense, person, number, gender, or case. This is typically done by adding prefixes or suffixes to the root of the word. Examples of inflected languages include Latin, Russian, and German.
Anglo-Saxon is an inflected language. It has a complex system of noun and verb inflections to denote grammatical relations, such as case, number, and tense. It is not considered simple, as it has a range of inflections and grammatical complexities.
seid is the inflected form of the verb sein (to be).ihr seid - you are (2nd person plural, informal)
Yes, truer is a word. In the definition of true in the Merrian-Webster, truer is an inflected form of true.
The origin of the name "Nokia" is obscure. In modern Finnish, noki means soot and nokia is its inflected plural, although this form of the word is rarely if ever used. The origin of the name "Nokia" is obscure. In modern Finnish, nokimeans soot and nokia is its inflected plural, although this form of the word is rarely if ever used.
Non-inflected speech is called monotone speech. In monotone speech, the speaker's pitch remains flat and lacks variation, resulting in a lack of emphasis or emotional expression.
So far as the form itself goes, you can't inflect a tense, because a tense is already an inflection, and inflections can't be themselves inflected. However, there are reasons in English to treat the perfect tense syntactically as a tense inflected form of a past tense. This is argued in, e.g., James McCawley's book The Syntactic Phenomena of English.
Fetch because no conjugation took place... it is in its original infinitive form
No, Modern English is not a highly inflected synthetic language. It is considered an analytic language, meaning it relies more on word order and auxiliary words to convey meaning, as opposed to inflections on words.
The last name Aase is Norwegian and Swedish. This place name is very common in Norway from an inflected form of ås meaning 'ridge'.
Verbs are conjugated, not languages. Do you mean 'inflected'?