All nouns ending in vowels in Irish are considered strong.
Here belong nouns ending in a consonant.
There is also a 5th paradigm for foreign nouns ending in .
As noted above, nouns ending in -chen or -lein take the neuter.
For nouns ending in a strong syllable (including all monosyllabic words), the plural is formed by addition of -en.
But one day the New York illustrator found himself compiling a list of characters he wanted to draw; all were nouns ending in "er."
The "a" is merely the noun ending to the word.
Feminine nouns ending in -st always form the plural by adding -s.
The third declension is used for feminine nouns ending in ь.
Loss of h affected nouns and adjectives ending in *-s or *-h, such as kuningas "king".
The significance of this is unclear, given that Koine Greek provides a choice of several noun endings with different isopsephy values.
The entire indefinite noun endings -in and -un (with nunation) are left off.
For example, Mr. Yamamoto points out, in the Algonquin family of languages, noun endings are divided into two basic categories: animate and inanimate.
Morphological purism: directed against foreign inflection and declension (such as the resistance to plural -s in noun endings in Scandinavian languages).
Unlike the Indo-European languages, Etruscan noun endings were more agglutinative, with some nouns bearing two or three agglutinated suffixes.
Adjectives do not agree with the noun but may be given noun endings if there is no noun present to receive them.
A major difference between Novial and Esperanto/Ido concerns noun endings.
Word order is more free in Polish, partly because the noun endings help people understand the role of the word.
For example, consider the noun endings of the Latin "first declension" singular of the word rosa "rose":
(The genitive case below means that morphologically speaking, they can either take the nominative or the dative suffix, see Other noun endings.)