Talk:German adjectives
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To correctly agree German adjectives, the case, number and gender of the nominal phrase must be considered along with the article of the noun.
Sounds very awkward (Especially "to correctly agree"). I can't think of a good alternative right now.
134.226.1.234 17:00, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] viel- is just an adjective and doesn't have definite article declination
I didn't want to just march in and change it, but this is wrong with regard to "viel-":
After manch- (some), solch- (such), viel- (much; many), welch- (which), which have definite article declination.
i.e. "Ich habe viele neue Bücher gekauft", not "viele neuen"
206.126.254.94 22:30, 31 May 2007 (UTC)
- You're right. I'll change it. — Sebastian 22:57, 31 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] "All-" in fact has has weak (i.e. definite article) inflection
Again, I don't want to go in and mess about with this, but there are still some errors:
"All-" actually has weak (i.e. definite article) inflection, as in "alle guten Dinge" (c.f. wrong "alle gute Dinge" and correct "viele gute Dinge")
This is the text as it stands:
[edit] Strong inflection
Strong inflection is used:
o ...
o ...
o After wenig- (few), viel- (much; many), mehrer- (several; many), all- (all), which also have strong adjective inflection.
The italicised bit seems a bit superfluous...!
Just thought I'd check with others before fiddling about with the article text. I may not be 100% correct with this due to some potential ambiguity with mixed and weak inflection in this regard. Thanks! Frog escalator 14:56, 12 August 2007 (UTC)