Difference between revisions of "User:Lacey/Cheatsheet"
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m (→Masculine: jottin about u-stems) |
m (→Nouns: What does "irregular" even mean?) |
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Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
* 2 = -er | * 2 = -er | ||
* 3 = "irregular" | * 3 = "irregular" | ||
+ | ;So what exactly does "irregular" mean? Do words automatically go in class 3 when they have umlauts? And why? To keep them separate for learners? | ||
Nom. pl. in weak classes: | Nom. pl. in weak classes: |
Revision as of 23:11, 1 July 2021
Nouns
Class number in strong masc/fem only refers to nom. pl. ending:
- 1 = -ar
- 2 = -er
- 3 = "irregular"
- So what exactly does "irregular" mean? Do words automatically go in class 3 when they have umlauts? And why? To keep them separate for learners?
Nom. pl. in weak classes:
- masc = -ar
- fem = -er
- neut = -er
Classes
Masculine
- both a- and i-stems could have ar-, s- or both genitives in ON (source)
Nynorn puts i- and u-stems in the same class (Strong 2) regardless of their genitives (u-stems didn't have s-genitives in ON)
- That isn't it either. son is a u-stem but is in class 3 for being "irregular"
- nm.s.1 = strong a-stem (ex. hest < ON hestr)
- nm.s.2(1) = strong i-stem, ar-genitive
- nm.s.2(2) = strong i-stem, s-genitive
- nm.s.2(3) = strong u-stem
- nm.s.3 = "irregular" (ex. finger < ON fingr)
- nm.w. = stem(s)? (ex. skuggi < ON skuggi)
Feminine
- nf.s.1 = fem strong ijō-stem (ex. mør < ON mýrr)
- nf.s.2 = fem strong i-stem (ex. ferd < ON ferð)
- nf.s.3 = fem, strong consonant stem (ex. gås < ON gás)
- nf.w. stem(s)? (ex. voga < ON vika)