0 (of a word) to change spelling or ending according to the way it is used in a sentence; to change a spelling or ending in this way:
Stative verbs are more often inflected than nonstatives (256), consistent with ben-marking in the basilect.
A series of modally inflected solos ripples over the orchestra and a pair of double-basses rumble the piece to an uncertain conclusion.
With such tokens, it was (often) not possible to determine whether the verb was inflected with -s or uninflected.
Our second question was about differences between inflected and derived words.
If obvious stem-change verbs are often not appropriately inflected, why should nochange verbs like cut assumed to be intended as grammatically past ?
Clearly, the sentence position differences reported for nouns and verbs apply as well to nouns inflected for plural and verbs inflected for third person singular.
By and large, novel forms will be inflected in the same way as the words in the language they most resemble.
Also, inflected forms that contained a vowel change were counted as separate entries.