Appendix talk:Ancient Greek Attic declension

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Latest comment: 12 years ago by 62.169.220.17
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I cannot seem to recall any examples of Attic declension nouns that aren't male, but I'm sure some exist. If someone could edit the appendix appropriately, I would be appreciative. Medellia 20:04, 5 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

Apart from masculines, there are are both feminines and neuters in the attic declension. E.g. η άλως, το ανόγεων. I don't know how to write text in ancient Greek, so I have not added feminines and neutrals to the table. Anybody who can, please do so. By the way, all Greek grammar textbooks of Ancient Greek I've seen, categorize the Attic declension as a subcategory of the second declension (which seems only natural to me, being a Greek). You can check it out here and here (both sites in Greek, but that shouldn't be a problem). I don't how the categorization stands in other literatures, so I just added a comment refering to the Greek categorization. Xzar62.169.220.17 07:55, 7 June 2011 (UTC)Reply