mutation – see
umlaut.
negative concord – negation falls not only on a verb phrase but also on any
other appropriate
element in the clause, as in non-standard present-day
English
I didn’t see nothing.
nominal – belonging to the word class ‘noun’, or having
the characteristics of a
noun.
nominative case – grammatical case exhibited by a noun phrase functioning
as
the subject of the verb, and usually (but by no means always) expressing
semantically the agent of the action that the verb denotes.
nucleus – see
syllable.
number – grammatical category associated especially with nouns.
In English,
‘plural’ and ‘singular’ numbers are distinguished inflectionally (e.g. ‘cats’
versus ‘cat’). In Old English there was also a dual category,
occasionally used
with pronouns and adjectives.
onset – see
syllable.
orthography – the spelling system of a language.
parataxis – where two syntactic units are linked together by juxtaposition and
without any conjunction.
passive – see
voice.
paradigm – the set of forms associated with a noun
or an adjective in forming a
declensional class, or with a verb in a conjugational class.
past – see
tense.
person – grammatical category associated especially with pronouns,
identifying
individuals in relation to the speaker and hearer. English distinguishes ‘first
person’ (I, we), ‘second person’ (you) and ‘third person’ (he, she, it, they).
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