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Inflected   /ɪnflˈɛktəd/   Listen
Inflected

adjective
1.
(of the voice) altered in tone or pitch.
2.
Showing alteration in form (especially by the addition of affixes).  "German is an inflected language"



Inflect

verb
(past & past part. inflected; pres. part. inflecting)
1.
Change the form of a word in accordance as required by the grammatical rules of the language.
2.
Vary the pitch of one's speech.  Synonyms: modulate, tone.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Inflected" Quotes from Famous Books



... the further they are removed from the surface of the Earth: It will hence necessarily follow, that (as in the Experiment of the salt and fresh Water) the ray of Light passing obliquely through the Air also, which is of very different density, will be continually, and infinitely inflected, or bended, from a streight, or ...
— Micrographia • Robert Hooke

... and are called regular verbs. Verbs that depart from this plan are called irregular. The verb to be is irregular in Latin as in English. The present, imperfect, and future tenses of the indicative are inflected as follows: ...
— Latin for Beginners • Benjamin Leonard D'Ooge

... forever plays'? It seemed, but for the greatness of the room, to be a repetition of one of those evenings at Borva that now belonged to a far-off past. Here was Sheila, not minding the smoke, listening to Ingram as of old, and sometimes saying something in that sweetly inflected speech of hers; here was Ingram, talking, as it were, out of a brown study, and morosely objecting to pretty nearly everything Lavender said, but always ready to prove Sheila right; and Lavender himself, as unlike a married man as ever, talking impatiently, impetuously, ...
— Library Of The World's Best Literature, Ancient And Modern, Vol. 5 • Various

... degradation on record, to its ancient purity. In the time of Gottsched, the authors of Germany wrote a macaronic jargon, in which French and Latin made up a considerable proportion of every sentence: nay, it happened often that foreign words were inflected with German forms; and the whole result was such as to remind the reader of the medical examination in the Malade Imaginaire ...
— Biographical Essays • Thomas de Quincey

... sound was neither an "oh" nor an "ah," but a kind of Danish inflected "awe," which was usually not unpleasing to hear. "How are you, once more, Meeses Cowperwood? It eez sudge a pleasure to see ...
— The Titan • Theodore Dreiser

... would bend round opaque bodies and produce the motion of light behind them, as sound turns a corner, or as waves of water wash round a rock. It was proved that the bending round referred to by Newton actually occurs, but that the inflected waves abolish each other by their mutual interference. Young also discerned a fundamental difference between the waves of light and those of sound. Could you see the air through which sound-waves are passing, you would observe every individual particle of air oscillating to and fro, in the ...
— Six Lectures on Light - Delivered In The United States In 1872-1873 • John Tyndall

... to hit Pennington. But there was no reason why he should. Pennington's particular kind of flippancy was merely a result of his having been, in those far days before he was a remittance man, an Oxford graduate. So was his soft and charmingly inflected voice. But, quite reasonlessly, it was all Francis could do to respond with the politeness which is due to your almost irreplaceable second-in-command on a rush job. His manners once made, he decided that he didn't ...
— I've Married Marjorie • Margaret Widdemer

... corpuscles of the blood. Their motion, along with the streaming movement of rotation in the layer of white granular protoplasm that flows along the walls of the cell, under the high powers of the microscope "presents a wonderful scene of vital activity." This continues while the tentacle is inflected or the gland fed by animal matter, but vanishes by dissolution when the work is over and the tentacle straightens. That absorption takes place, and matter is conveyed from cell to cell, is well made ...
— Darwiniana - Essays and Reviews Pertaining to Darwinism • Asa Gray



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