Appendix:Glossary: Difference between revisions

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; {{anchor|depersonal}}depersonal
; {{anchor|depersonal}}depersonal
: In {{language name|rad}} grammar, depersonalisation refers to the morphosyntactic phenomenon of verbs losing their {{glossary|person|personal}} {{glossary|conjugation|endings}} to preceding conjunctions or particles, thus carrying only {{glossary|number}} φ-features. They are typically listed as their own forms in tables. Not to be confused with {{glossary|impersonal|impersonal verbs}}.
: In {{language name|rad}} grammar, depersonalisation, also known in Hirdic linguistics as the '''disjunctive''', refers to the morphosyntactic phenomenon of verbs losing their {{glossary|person|personal}} {{glossary|conjugation|endings}} to preceding conjunctions or particles, thus carrying only {{glossary|number}} φ-features. They are typically listed as their own forms in tables. Not to be confused with {{glossary|impersonal|impersonal verbs}}.


; {{anchor|dual}}dual, dual number
; {{anchor|dual}}dual, dual number

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