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1 спрегаем
грам, inflective, inflected; finite* * *спрега̀ем,сег. страд. прич. език. inflective, inflected; finite; conjugable.* * *inflective (грам.)* * *грам, inflective, inflected; finite -
2 флексивен
вж. inflective, inflectionalфлексивно окончание inflexion* * *флексѝвен,прил., -на, -но, -ни език. inflective, inflectional; \флексивенно окончание inflexion.* * *inflectional (ез.)* * *1. ез. inflective, inflectional 2. флексивно окончание inflexion -
3 спрягаемый
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4 гнущийся
2) Automation: flexural -
5 изменяемый
1) General subject: alterable, convertible, flective, inflective2) Computers: volatile3) Chemistry: in-out4) Mathematics: changeable6) Business: modifiable7) Network technologies: scalable8) Programming: configurable -
6 сгибающийся
1) General subject: inflective, inflexive, (a bendy rubber doll) bendy2) Geology: collapsible3) Sports: diping4) Automobile industry: bendable5) Mining: collapsible steel form6) Metallurgy: folding7) Robots: flexible (о конструктивном элементе) -
7 склоняемый
1) General subject: inflective2) Grammar: declinable -
8 спрягаемый
General subject: conjugatable, inflective -
9 флективные языки
General subject: inflectional languages, inflective languages, inflexional languages, inflexive languages -
10 флективный
1) Grammar: flexional2) Linguistics: fusional, inflectional, inflective, inflexional3) Information technology: inflected -
11 язык с развитой системой флексий
General subject: a highly inflective language, a highly inflexive languageУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > язык с развитой системой флексий
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12 beugbar
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13 dapat dibengkokkan
declinable* * *inflective -
14 굴곡하는
adj. inflective, inflexive -
15 изменяем
changeable, variable, alterable, modifiable, mutable* * *изменя̀ем,прил. changeable, variable, alterable, modifiable, mutable.* * *changeable; inflective (грам.); modifiable; variable* * *changeable, variable, alterable, modifiable, mutable -
16 флективен
вж. флексивен* * *флектѝвен,прил., -на, -но, -ни inflective.* * *вж. флексивен -
17 al-þingi
n. [þing], mod. form alþing, by dropping the inflective i; the gen., however, still remains unchanged, alþingis. The parliament or general assembly of the Icel. Commonwealth, invested with the supreme legislative and judicial power, consisting of the legislative lögrétta (q. v.), and the courts, v. dómr, fimtardómr, fjórðungsdómar; v. also goði, goðorð, lügsögumaðr, lögsaga, lögberg, and many other words referring to the constitution and functions of the alþingi. It was founded by Ulfljot about A. D. 930, Ib. ch. 3; and reformed by Thord Gellir A. D. 964, who instituted the courts and carried out the political divisions of Icel. into goðorð, fjórðungar, and þing, ch. 5. In the years 1272 and 1281 the alþing, to some extent, changed its old forms, in order to comply with the new state of things. In the year 1800 it was abolished altogether. A kind of parliament, under the old name alþingi, was again established in the year 1843, and sat at Reykjavík. Before the year 930 a general assembly was held in Kjalarnes, whence it was removed under the name of alþingi to the river Öxará, near to the mountain Ármannsfell. The much-debated passage in Hænsaþ. S. ch. 14—en þingit var þá undir Ármannsfelli—therefore simply means that the events referred to happened after the removal of the Kjalarnesping. The parliament at first met on the Thursday beginning the tenth week of the summer, which fell between the 11th and the 17th of June; by a law of the year 999 its opening was deferred to the next following Thursday, between the 18th and 24th of June, old style; after the union with Norway, or after A. D. 1272 or 1281, the time of meeting was further deferred to June 29. July 2 (Vis. B. V. M.) is hence called Þing-Maríumessa. The parliament lasted for a fortnight; the last day of the session, called vápnatak, because the weapons having been laid aside during the session were again taken (cp. Engl. wapentake), thus fell on the first or second Wednesday in July. As to the rules of the alþingi, vide esp. the first chapter of the Þ. Þ. Grág. (Kb.) i. p. 38 sqq. The most eventful years in the history of the alþingi are, A. D. 930 (foundation), 964 (reform), 1000 (introduction of Christianity), 1004 (institution of the Fifth Court), 1024 (repudiation of the attempt of the king of Norway to annex Iceland), 1096 (introduction of tithes), 1117 (first codification of laws), 1262–1264 (submission to the king of Norway), 1272 and 1281 (new codes introduced). In the year 1338 there was no alþing held because of civil disturbances, eytt alþingi ok þóttu þat údærni, Ann. s. a., Grág. (Þ. Þ.) Íslend. bók, Kristni S., Njála, Sturl., Árna b. S., Ó. H. (1853), ch. 114; of modern writers, vide esp. Maurer, Entsteh. des Ísl. Staates; Dasent, Introd. to Burnt Njal; some of the Introductions by Jón Sigurðsson in D. I., esp. that to the Gamli Sáttmáli of the year 1262.COMPDS: alþingisdómr, alþingisför, alþingishelgun, alþingislof, alþingismál, alþingisnefna, alþingisreið, alþingissátt, alþingissáttarhald, alþingissekt, alþingissektarhald. -
18 apaldr
(gen. -rs or -s, pl. -rar or -ar), m. apple-tree.* * *rs, m. pl. rar, [O. H. G. aphaltrâ; A. S. apuldre; Dan. abild; Swed. apel], doubtless a southern word, the inflective syllable dr being a mutilation of ‘tré,’ arbor, a word now almost extinct in Germany, (for a homely, common word such as ‘tré’ could not have been corrupted in the native tongue);—apaldr thus, etymologically as well as properly, means an apple-tree; fruits and fruit-trees were doubtless imported into Scandinavia from abroad; the word appears only in the later heroic poems, such as the Hkv. Hjörv. 6; the verses in Sdm. 5 are in a different metre from the rest of the poem, and probably interpolated, Fas. i. 120; epli á apaldri, Sks. 106; tveir apaldar (with the radical r dropped), Fas. iii. 60; apaldrs flúr, Karl. 200, 311: as the etymological sense in the transmuted word soon got lost, a fresh pleonastic compound was made, viz. apaldrs-tré.COMPDS: apaldrsgarðr, apaldrsklubba, apaldrstré. -
19 i lakueshëm
I.declinableII.flexibleIII.inflectiveIV.pliable -
20 verbuigend
adj. inflective
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См. также в других словарях:
Inflective — In*flect ive, a. 1. Capable of, or pertaining to, inflection; deflecting; as, the inflective quality of the air. Derham. [1913 Webster] 2. (Gram.) Inflectional; characterized by variation, or change in form, to mark case, tense, etc.; subject to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
inflective — inflect ► VERB 1) Grammar change or be changed by inflection. 2) vary the intonation or pitch of (the voice). 3) technical bend or deflect inwards. DERIVATIVES inflective adjective. ORIGIN Latin inflectere, from in into + flectere to bend … English terms dictionary
inflective — ə̇nˈflektiv, tēv adjective 1. : capable of, relating to, or tending to inflection : deflecting 2. : inflectional inflective language … Useful english dictionary
Inflective language — Inflective In*flect ive, a. 1. Capable of, or pertaining to, inflection; deflecting; as, the inflective quality of the air. Derham. [1913 Webster] 2. (Gram.) Inflectional; characterized by variation, or change in form, to mark case, tense, etc.;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
inflective — adjective see inflect … New Collegiate Dictionary
inflective — See inflect. * * * … Universalium
inflective — adjective That inflects … Wiktionary
inflective — adj. inflectional, of or pertaining to inflection (Grammar); having the tendency to bend or to inflect; deflecting … English contemporary dictionary
inflective — in·flec·tive … English syllables
Agglutinative — Ag*glu ti*na*tive, a. [Cf. F. agglutinatif.] 1. Pertaining to agglutination; tending to unite, or having power to cause adhesion; adhesive. Syn: polysynthetic, holophrastic. [1913 Webster] 2. (Philol.) Formed or characterized by agglutination, as … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Indeclinable — In de*clin a*ble, a. [L. indeclinabilis: cf. F. ind[ e]clinable. See {In } not, and {Decline}.] (Gram.) Not declinable; not varied by inflective terminations; as, nihil (nothing), in Latin, is an indeclinable noun. n. An indeclinable word. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English