- de|clen|sion|al
- de|clen|sion|al «dih KLEHN shuh nuhl», adjective.of or belonging to declension.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
de|clen|sion — «dih KLEHN shuhn», noun. 1. Grammar. a) the giving of the different endings or forms to nouns, pronouns, and adjectives according to their case, number, and gender, or their relation to other words in the sentence. SYNONYM(S): inflection. b) the… … Useful english dictionary
sion — abra·sion; ab·scis·sion; ab·ster·sion; ac·cen·sion; ac·ces·sion·al; ad·he·sion; ad·he·sion·al; ad·mis·sion; ad·pro·mis·sion; af·fu·sion; ag·gres·sion; al·li·sion; al·lu·sion; am·bi·ver·sion; an·i·mad·ver·sion; an·te·ver·sion; an·ti·mis·sion;… … English syllables
clen — de·clen·sion; de·clen·sion·al; de·clen·sion·al·ly; … English syllables
declension — de·clen·sion … English syllables
declensional — de·clen·sion·al … English syllables
declensionally — de·clen·sion·al·ly … English syllables
DE — DE; de·acetylate; de·acidification; de·acidify; de·activate; de·a·dose; de·aerate; de·af·fer·en·ta·tion; de·alate; de·alat·ed; de·al·bate; de·alkalization; de·alkalize; de·alkylate; de·am·bu·la·tion; de·ambulatory; de·amidate; de·amidization;… … English syllables
declension — de•clen•sion [[t]dɪˈklɛn ʃən[/t]] n. 1) gram. a) the inflection of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives for categories such as case and number b) the whole set of inflected forms of such a word, or the recital thereof in a fixed order c) a class of… … From formal English to slang
Declension — De*clen sion, n. [Apparently corrupted fr. F. d[ e]clinaison, fr. L. declinatio, fr. declinare. See {Decline}, and cf. {Declination}.] 1. The act or the state of declining; declination; descent; slope. [1913 Webster] The declension of the land… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Declension of the needle — Declension De*clen sion, n. [Apparently corrupted fr. F. d[ e]clinaison, fr. L. declinatio, fr. declinare. See {Decline}, and cf. {Declination}.] 1. The act or the state of declining; declination; descent; slope. [1913 Webster] The declension of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English