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- Colognian_grammar abstract "The Colognian grammar describes the formal systems of the modern Colognian language used in Cologne currently and during at least the past 150 years. It does not cover the Historic Colognian grammar, although similarities exist.Colognian has verbal conjugation and nominal declension.The Colognian declension system marks nouns, pronouns, articles, and adjectives to distinguish gender, case, and number.There are the three grammatical genders called feminine, masculine, and neuter, and a special case most often treated as exceptions of neuter. Like the German declension, the Colognian declension system does not mark grammatical gender for its plural forms; plural can thus be treated similar to another gender in it formalism.Five grammatical cases are distinguished: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, and vocative.Genitive has two variants, either of which can also be described as expressions using dative.Number is either singular or plural in declension.The Colognian conjugation system has a few hundred individual types of grammatical conjugations, which mark verbs to distinguish person, number, voice, aspect, tense, mood, modality, etc.Colognian basic verbs are classified as strong, weak, or irregular.Independently, there are composite verbs, which are classified as either separable or inseparable.Colognian also has modal verbs and auxiliary verbs, each forming grammatical classes of their own.There are three persons, 1st person, 2nd person, and 3rd person.Number is either singular or plural in conjugations.Grammatical voice can be active, passive, or reflexive.Colognian has indicative and conjunctive moods, and there are also imperative and energetic mood, inferential and renarrative, none of which is completely developed.The aspects of Colognian conjugation include unitary-episodic, continuous, habitual-enduring, and gnomic.In Colognian, grammatical tense can be present tense, preterite tense or past tense, simple perfect or present perfect, past perfect tense, completed past perfect tense, simple future tense, or perfect future tense.".
- Colognian_grammar wikiPageExternalLink grammatikderrip00mngoog.
- Colognian_grammar wikiPageID "29484625".
- Colognian_grammar wikiPageRevisionID "570759544".
- Colognian_grammar cleanup "September 2011".
- Colognian_grammar hasPhotoCollection Colognian_grammar.
- Colognian_grammar originalResearch "September 2011".
- Colognian_grammar refimprove "September 2011".
- Colognian_grammar subject Category:Colognian_dialect.
- Colognian_grammar subject Category:Grammars_of_specific_languages.
- Colognian_grammar type Abstraction100002137.
- Colognian_grammar type Cognition100023271.
- Colognian_grammar type Content105809192.
- Colognian_grammar type DescriptiveLinguistics106181584.
- Colognian_grammar type Discipline105996646.
- Colognian_grammar type Grammar106174404.
- Colognian_grammar type GrammarsOfSpecificLanguages.
- Colognian_grammar type KnowledgeDomain105999266.
- Colognian_grammar type Linguistics106172789.
- Colognian_grammar type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Colognian_grammar type Science105999797.
- Colognian_grammar comment "The Colognian grammar describes the formal systems of the modern Colognian language used in Cologne currently and during at least the past 150 years.".
- Colognian_grammar label "Colognian grammar".
- Colognian_grammar sameAs m.0dr_xy9.
- Colognian_grammar sameAs Q5147855.
- Colognian_grammar sameAs Q5147855.
- Colognian_grammar sameAs Colognian_grammar.
- Colognian_grammar wasDerivedFrom Colognian_grammar?oldid=570759544.
- Colognian_grammar isPrimaryTopicOf Colognian_grammar.