User:Erutuon/Ancient Greek categories
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Brainstorming about Ancient Greek categories. Feel free to add or modify categories here.
Accent[edit]
Easiest to implement with an Ancient Greek headword module that handles all parts of speech. Use terms, even if not strictly necessary. Also, were technically describing the accent position of the lemma, but whatever.
- Ancient Greek terms by accent type
- Ancient Greek terms by accent position
- Ancient Greek terms with acute accent
- Ancient Greek oxytone terms (or "terms with acute on ultima")
- Ancient Greek paroxytone terms (or "terms with acute on penult")
- Ancient Greek proparoxytone terms (or "terms with acute on antepenult")
- Ancient Greek terms with circumflex accent
- Ancient Greek perispomenon terms (or "terms with circumflex on ultima")
- Ancient Greek properispomenon terms (or "terms with circumflex on penult")
- Ancient Greek terms with acute accent
- Ancient Greek terms by accent position
Nouns[edit]
Should use "x-declension" rather than "x declension" and fix the titles of the currently existing parent categories eventually.
- Ancient Greek nouns by inflection type (should this be "declension type"?)
- Ancient Greek first-declension nouns
- Ancient Greek first-declension nouns with long alpha
- Ancient Greek first-declension nouns with eta
- Ancient Greek feminine first-declension nouns
- Ancient Greek feminine first-declension nouns with long alpha
- Ancient Greek feminine first-declension nouns with eta (should be "first-declension nouns")
- Ancient Greek feminine first-declension nouns with short alpha
- Ancient Greek second-declension nouns
- Ancient Greek second-declension nouns by gender
- Ancient Greek second-declension masculine and feminine nouns (because these are declined identically; or "common nouns"? no, that would indicate the gender is variable)
- Ancient Greek second-declension masculine nouns
- Ancient Greek second-declension feminine nouns
- Ancient Greek second-declension common nouns (those with variable gender)
- Ancient Greek second-declension neuter nouns
- Ancient Greek second-declension nouns by gender
- Ancient Greek third-declension nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension nouns by stem type
- Ancient Greek third-declension consonant-stem nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension plosive-stem nouns (or "stop-stem")
- Ancient Greek third-declension labial-stem nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension dental-stem nouns (this could theoretically include ν-stems, in which case not all of its contents belong under "plosive-stem nouns")
- Ancient Greek third-declension velar-stem nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension plosive-stem nouns (or "stop-stem")
- Ancient Greek third-declension vowel-stem nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension vowel- and consonant-stem nouns (where stems have lost a former consonant s, y, w between vowels; or is this a misnomer because, for instance, -ευς should be analyzed synchronically as a suffix, and not as a stem ευ plus an ending -ς?)
- Ancient Greek third-declension consonant-stem nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension nouns with sigmatic nominative (perhaps excluding s-stems, which have s in the stem?)
- Ancient Greek third-declension nouns by gender
- Ancient Greek third-declension masculine and feminine nouns (because these are declined identically)
- Ancient Greek third-declension masculine nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension feminine nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension common nouns (those with variable gender)
- Not the best name imho... There's epicene, but it refers to yet something else, it seems.
- Ancient Greek third-declension neuter nouns
- Ancient Greek third-declension nouns by stem type
- Ancient Greek first-declension nouns