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Inflected language#REDIRECT Inflection Inflected languageIs there a reason for mentioning English irregular verbs? Aren't regular ones inflected too? --Eric :Regular verbs are generally less inflected. I've made that clearer, I think. --User:Archibald Fitzchesterfield ::There are big classes of regular inflected verbs in English. These are represented by some of the most common verbs in English: I-class 1: ''spin'' (for some speakers), ''drink'', ''swim'', ''sing'', ''sink'' I-class 2: ''write'', ''ride'', ''smite'' O-class : ''blow'', ''throw'', ''grow'' ::User:thefamouseccles 09:19 22 Nov 2003 (UTC) I'd also like to point out that the Mohawk word given is not an inflected word, but a polysynthetic word. The terms "inflected" and "synthetic" are still synonyms in the common imagination, but linguistically the two are extremely different. User:thefamouseccles 09:20 22 Nov 2003 (UTC) See other meanings of words starting from letter: IIA | IB | IC | ID | IE | IF | IG | IH | IJ | IK | IL | IM | IN | IO | IP | IR | IS | IT | IU | IW | IX | IY | IZ |Words begining with Inflected_language: Inflected_language Inflected_language Inflected_languages |
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