¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Feminines
1. feminine [n] - See also: feminine
Lexicographical Neighbors of Feminines
Literary usage of Feminines
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Greek Grammar: For Schools and Colleges by James Hadley (1884)
"Originally all these feminines ended in long -5 and were declined like x«/"*- BU^
... We distinguish, therefore, Two CLASSES OF Feminines. 137. FIRST CLASS. ..."
2. A Greek Grammar for Schools and Colleges by Herbert Weir Smyth (1916)
"CONTRACTS (Feminines AND MASCULINES) 194. Most substantives in аи, ей, and ей?
are contracted. ... The few feminines are declined like the masculines. ..."
3. New High German: A Comparative Study by William Winston Valentine (1894)
"With Feminines without Article applied to things and taking the Gen. s : Ueber
Naturs Grosse ... Note on the Gen. s and Plural s found with NHG Feminines. ..."
4. A New German Grammar by Marion Dexter Learned (1903)
"23 The Weak Declension The weak declension forms its oblique cases by the addition
of It (except in the case of feminines, which remain .unchanged in the ..."
5. A Sanskrit Grammar for Beginners, in Devanâgarî and Roman Letters Throughout by Friedrich Max Müller (1870)
"... declension of the corresponding feminine nouns. A few observations on this
point must suffice. § 243. Adjectives* in ^ a form their feminines in ^n«. ..."
6. The Primitives of the Greek Tongue: With Rules for Derivation by Claude Lancelot (1812)
"The active is formed from the present, and from the second aorist, and sometimes
from the perfect, and the first aorist. FRUM the PRESENT come the feminines ..."
7. Hebrew Grammar of Gesenius by Wilhelm Gesenius, Moses Stuart (1846)
"Paradigms of the Feminines. These are much more simple than the masculines, ...
A of the Feminines. In the plural, there is no practical difference between ..."