declension

A falling off, decay or descent.

Noun

  1. A falling off, decay or descent.
    • Refinement of feeling, intellectual tastes, and a noble hospitality, were among the features of his character; and hoary years brought no mental declension, and drew no shade over the ardent affections by which he was...
    • The custom of rolling a burning wheel down a hill […] might well pass for an imitation of the sun's course in the sky, and the imitation would be especially appropriate on Midsummer Day when the sun's annual declension...
  2. The act of declining a word; the act of listing the inflections of a noun, pronoun or adjective in order.
  3. The product of that act; a list of declined forms.
    • a page full of declensions
  4. A way of categorizing nouns, pronouns, or adjectives according to the inflections they receive.
    • In Latin, 'amicus' belongs to the second declension. Most second-declension nouns end in '-i' in the genitive singular and '-um' in the accusative singular.

Origin

From late Middle English declinson, from Middle French declinaison (Modern French: déclinaison), from Latin dēclīnātiō. Doublet of declination.

Forms

declensions

Synonyms

declination

Hypernyms

flection flexion inflection inflexion accidence

Hyponyms

first declension fourth declension mixed declension second declension strong declension third declension weak declension

Related

misdecline

Derived

declense declensed declensional declensionism declensionist double declension