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There are a plethora of paradigms for the distributive plural formations, 99% of which time come straight from the Yiddish plural. | There are a plethora of paradigms for the distributive plural formations, 99% of which time come straight from the Yiddish plural. The regular plural endings for nouns are ס- -s for a noun that ends in an unstressed r, m, n, or vowel, ען- -en after a stressed vowel, m, n, ng, or nk and ן- -n for most other types of nouns. | ||
There are a very large number of nouns with irregular distribute plural forms, including -es (these are usually nouns of Slavic origin), and -er with umlaut (eg., man 'man', cf mener 'men'; kind 'child', cf kinder 'children'), or umlaut alone (eg., האנט hant 'hand', cf הענט hent 'hands'). Many words of Hebrew origin form plurals, not with -im, but with -in. Feminine Hebrew word end in -es. Many plural forms of words are accompanied with a stem vowel mutation. | |||
The dual ending is unique, in that is shifts the accent pattern of the root to itself. It may be written '''-áyim''' to indicate that shift. This shift triggers vowel reduction of of the previous syllable, if it is a diphthong (cutting it down to its first vowel). | The dual ending is unique, in that is shifts the accent pattern of the root to itself. It may be written '''-áyim''' to indicate that shift. This shift triggers vowel reduction of of the previous syllable, if it is a diphthong (cutting it down to its first vowel). | ||
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| -ei- || -a- | | -ei- || -a- | ||
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| -ai- || -ei- | |||
|- | |- | ||
| -o- || -ow- | | -o- || -ow- |
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