In most of the world languages there are examples a student needs to learn in order be able to identify the role and meaning of a word in a sentence. Nouns, pronouns and adjectives undergo certain changes to indicate features such as number (typically singular or plural, in Sanskrit also dual), case (subject , object , ...), or gender. Generally groups of nouns share a similar pattern of declension and one noun of each group serves as an example for the whole group and has to be learned by heart by the students.
Similarly for verbs there are conjugation examples which a student has to learn by heart as they show the changes a verb undergoes when it is affected by person, number, gender, tense, aspect, mood, voice, or other grammatical categories.
With iLanguage you can set up & manage declension-, conjugation- and other examples for the language you study. Once an example is entered you can link it with a mouse-click to any number of words in your wordbooks to which it applies.
During learning sessions with the Vocabulary Player or when you look up a word in your wordbook it is indicated whether a word has an example linked to it and you can get it displayed. |