Conjugation in a sentence as a noun

> Not quite: what you cite are just pronouns, but the conjugation and grammar doesn't vary.

One is a noun, and the other a verb in its basic conjugation will have the same set of letters.

French has two non-exceptions to verb conjugation "rules".

Ganbare is a conjugation of the Japanese verb ganbaru which means to "try one's best".

I wish Chinese were the same way. Chinese grammar is very simple and there's little or no conjugation.

Even knowing which to use, completely learning the conjugation rules for them took quite a bit of effort.

" Frequent signs of non-native English are improper verb conjugation and article placement, rather than something like "should of.

The use of "am" in this context is a throwback to the now obsolete use of "to be" as the auxiliary verb in the present perfect conjugation of certain verbs.

To amplify what impendia said, Hiragana[1] is mostly used for participles and conjugation.

It's the best method for brute-force memorization of vocabulary and conjugation.

But as soon as I started taking Chinese classes, I fell in love with that language--no declensions of nouns, no conjugation of verbs, and mostly indication of grammar by word order, as in English--and eventually switched my major course to Chinese when I had to formally declare a major and dropped taking Russian classes after a while.

Conjugation definitions

noun

the state of being joined together

See also: junction conjunction colligation

noun

the inflection of verbs

noun

the complete set of inflected forms of a verb

noun

a class of verbs having the same inflectional forms

noun

the act of pairing a male and female for reproductive purposes; "the casual couplings of adolescents"; "the mating of some species occurs only in the spring"

See also: coupling mating pairing union

noun

the act of making or becoming a single unit; "the union of opposing factions"; "he looked forward to the unification of his family for the holidays"

See also: union unification uniting jointure