All other adjectives areuninflected in the singular: the termination in all cases of the pl.
All others are uninflected in the singular; they either belong to the classes mentioned above, or are predicative, or come after the noun qualified.
All other adjectives areuninflected in the singular.
The copy has been reproduced in preference to the original, because the original has been considerably and clumsily restored, whereas the copy gives us the older portrait as it existed before this restoration.
Yet such an interest is, in the long run, impossible, if the heart and will alone are allowed to be active in a matter so supremely great and which claims the entire man.
The Three Elements, as they successively appear in the Child, the Youth, and the Adult Man 50-53 II.
The unhasting and uninflected voice spoke again--the voice of a man with a single purpose, a man so close to the end that he laughs at pain.
Be, as opposed to am, in the sentence if it be so, is an uninflected word used in a limited sense, and consequently no true example of a subjunctive.
Hence {78} the Celtic tongues are preeminently uninflected in the way of declension.
How far two languages pass with equal rapidity from their ancient to their modern, from their inflected to their uninflected state (in other words, how far all languages alter at the same rate), is a question that will be noticed elsewhere.
It is, as has been previously shown, uninflected in the genitive or possessive case.
In uninflected languages, like English and Chinese, there is nothing but the order of the words to distinguish their functions.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "uninflected" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.