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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
inflected
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ German is an inflected language.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As lines approach one another their form is inflected.
▪ Figure 3.5 Percentage low vowel in variable monosyllables and prefixed and inflected disyllables.
▪ Frequency effects for irregularly inflected forms are also studied.
▪ Furthermore, it is necessary to relate inflected forms to root forms.
▪ Instead, there would be a set of lexical rules indicating which affix had to be added to produce each inflected form.
▪ Within the definition of a root form of a word is contained information about the inflected forms of the word.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inflected

Inflect \In*flect"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Inflected; p. pr. & vb. n. Inflecting.] [L. inflectere, inflexum; pref. in- in + flectere to bend. See Flexible, and cf. Inflex.]

  1. To turn from a direct line or course; to bend; to incline, to deflect; to curve; to bow.

    Are they [the rays of the sun] not reflected, refracted, and inflected by one and the same principle ?
    --Sir I. Newton.

  2. (Gram.) To vary, as a noun or a verb in its terminations; to decline, as a noun or adjective, or to conjugate, as a verb.

  3. To modulate, as the voice.

Inflected

Inflected \In*flect"ed\, a.

  1. Bent; turned; deflected.

  2. (Gram.) Having inflections; capable of, or subject to, inflection; inflective.

    Inflected cycloid (Geom.), a prolate cycloid. See Cycloid.

Wiktionary
inflected
  1. 1 deviate from a straight line. 2 (context grammar English) Changed in form to reflect function (referring to a word). 3 (context linguistics English) Having inflected word forms. 4 (context botany English) bent or curved inward or downward v

  2. (en-past of: inflect)

WordNet
inflected
  1. adj. (of the voice) altered in tone or pitch; "his southern Yorkshire voice was less inflected and singing than her northern one" [ant: uninflected]

  2. showing alteration in form (especially by the addition of affixes); "`boys' and `swam' are inflected English words"; "German is an inflected langauge" [ant: uninflected]

Usage examples of "inflected".

They were Muslims, though one could scarcely have known it from their speech, which was Russian, though inflected with the singsong Azerbaijani accent that wrongly struck the senior members of the engineering staff as entertaining.

A piece of leaf immersed in a few drops of a solution of one part of carbonate of ammonia to 437 of water had all the glands blackened and all the tentacles inflected in 5 m.

If the tentacles of a young, yet fully matured leaf, that has never been excited or become inflected, be examined, the cells forming the pedicels are seen to be filled with homogeneous, purple fluid.

I have indeed tried hundreds of times the state of the secretion on the discs of leaves which were inflected over various objects, and never failed to find it acid.

Small portions placed on the discs of three leaves caused their tentacles and blades to be strongly inflected within 8 hrs.

Halfminims of a solution of one part to 437 of water were placed on the discs of three leaves and acted most energetically, causing the tentacles of one to be inflected in 15 m.

It is a much more remarkable fact that when an object, such as a bit of meat or an insect, is placed on the disc of a leaf, as soon as the surrounding tentacles become considerably inflected, their glands pour forth an increased amount of secretion.

As soon as tentacles, which have remained closely inflected during several days over an object, begin to reexpand, their glands secrete less freely, or cease to secrete, and are left dry.

Fortyfour leaves had from one to six tentacles inflected, generally the longheaded ones.

This was likewise the case with the short tentacles round the margins of the disc, which had not as yet become inflected.

Those monkeys had been inflected with simian fever and would have died anyway.

The length of time during which the tentacles remain inflected largely depends on the quantity of the substance given, partly on the facility with which it is penetrated or acted on by the secretion, and partly on its essential nature.

As it was immediately evident that these fluids produced a great effect, I neglected in most cases to record how soon the tentacles became inflected.

When however a leaf becomes quickly inflected in water, as sometimes happens, especially during very warm weather, aggregation may occur in little over 1 hr. In all cases leaves left in water for more than 24 hrs.

A little drop of the same size and strength was also applied to four other glands, and in 1 hr. two became inflected, whilst the other two never moved.