n]
| 1. | modulation of the voice; change in pitch or tone of voice. |
| 2. | Also, flection. Grammar.
|
| 3. | a bend or angle. |
| 4. | Mathematics. a change of curvature from convex to concave or vice versa. |
in·flex·ion (ĭn-flěk'shən) n. Chiefly British Variant of inflection. |
A change in the form of a word to reflect different grammatical functions of the word in a sentence. English has lost most of its inflections. Those that remain are chiefly possessive ('s), as in “the boy's hat”; plural (-s), as in “the three girls”; and past tense (-d or -ed), as in cared. Other inflections are found in pronouns — as in he, him, his — and in irregular words such as think/thought, child/children, and mouse/mice.
inflection in·flec·tion (ĭn-flěk'shən)
n.
An inward bending.