Gothic is an inflected language, and as such its nouns, pronouns, and adjectives must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is called a declension. There are five grammatical cases in Gothic with a few traces of an old sixth instrumental case.
A complete declension consists of five grammatical cases.
Gothic language grammars often follow the common NOM-ACC-GEN-DAT order used for the Germanic languages. VOC is usually attached to the same line as ACC as a combined VOC-ACC, but if not, it may be placed between NOM and ACC (as in Wright's "Grammar of the Gothic Language").
An important distinction in many of the declension classes below is the difference between "short" and "long" stems. Frequently declension classes are divided into two subclasses, one for short-stemmed nouns and one for long-stemmed nouns.
A short stem contains:
A long stem is all other types of stems:
This declension has counterparts as the second declension (us/um) of Latin, and the omicron declension (os/on) of Greek. It contains masculine and neuter nouns.
A varied set of nouns have two stems, one occurring with endings that are null or begin with a consonant (the nominative, accusative and vocative singular) and another that occurs with endings beginning with a vowel (all but the previously listed forms).
One common situation leading to two-stem nouns is the automatic devoicing of voiced fricatives at (or near) the end of a word, e.g.:
More information about the exceptions in the -a declension can be found at page 82, ç175 of Grammar of the Gothic Language written by Joseph Wright. (Link can be found at the bottom.)
Other nouns with two stems are:
This declension is really just the -a declension with a j immediately preceding. However, due to various sound laws, a new declension subcategory has arisen that does not exactly follow the form of the plain -a declension. Similar developments occurred in Greek and the Slavic languages, among others.
This declension has as counterparts the second declension nouns in (-ius/-ium) of Latin. The counterparts in Greek are some second declension nouns in (-ios/-ion), as well as many that show effects of palatalization (e.g., -zdos < *-gyos or *-dyos; -llos < *-lyos; -ptos < -*pyos; -ssos or -ttos < -*tyos; -airos/-eiros/-oiros < *-aryos/-eryos/-oryos; -ainos/-einos/-oinos < *-anyos/enyos/onyos; etc., and similarly for neuter nouns in -ion or *-yon). It contains masculine and neuter nouns.
The masculine nouns have a distinction between short- and long-stemmed nouns, as described above. "army" is a prototypical short-stem noun, and is a prototypical long-stem noun. Neuters, however, have merged the two types in favor of the short-stem endings. Properly, there should be a distinction in the genitive singular between short-stem -jis and long-stem -eis, as for the masculine nouns, but -jis has mostly taken over. For a few nouns, however, both forms can be used, as in genitive or "of service", or "of peace", from neuter nouns "service" and "peace", respectively.
Note that the neuters in this declension can be said to follow the two-stem pattern (e.g. kuni vs. kunj-) described above for a-stems. A few neuters in this declension follow the same overall pattern but have additional vowel changes between the stems:
This declension counterparts the first declension (a) of Latin, and the alpha declension (a/as) of Greek. It contains feminine nouns.
Nouns ending in -jà  that have a short stem (see discussion above) behave identically to normal -à  stems, e.g. "strife", "relationship", "truth". However, long-stemmed nouns in -jà  have a different nominative singular ending in -i:
Note that in this particular case the "long-stem" declension includes nouns with a long vowel or diphthong and no following consonant. In addition, these nouns have a different stem in the nominative singular from all other cases:
This declension counterparts the vowel stems of the third declension (is) of Latin, and the third declension of Greek. It contains masculine and feminine nouns. Note that masculine nouns have become identical to -a stem nouns in the singular, while feminine nouns have preserved the original declension.
Similar to the situation with -a stems, some nouns have a different stem in the nominative and accusative singular than in other cases:
Some additional complications:
This declension counterparts the fourth declension (us) of Latin and parts of the third declension of Greek (cf. ÃÂá¿ÂÃÂàÃÂ). It contains nouns of all genders. "property" is a neuter -u stem, and like all neuters from the u stem it lacks a plural. Other remnants are the invariant neuter adjective "much" (with an adverbial genitive ), and or "spike, goad", occurring once in a gloss. "cider, fruit wine" is attested only in the accusative singular and without any context to infer its gender, so it may have been masculine or neuter.
The an, on and in declensions constitute a Germanic word derivation, which is also used for adjectives in the weak form marking definiteness. The declension loosely parallels the Latin nouns in -Ã Â, genitive -Ã Ânis/-inis, which shares the same Indo-European declensional origin (the Greek descendant being the more regularized -Ã Ân, -onos class).
Masculines and neuters belong to this declension.
There are a few neuter irregularities:
This declension is the feminine counterpart of the an declension.
Note: the first g in is pronounced . The Gothic language borrowed the practice of denoting by gg and by gk from the Koine Greek in which the New Testament was originally written.
This declension contains abstract feminines only.
A few family nouns inherited from Proto-Indo-European have a very archaic declension. Feminines and masculines have identical forms.
Inflected thus are also m., "brother", m., "father", f., "daughter".
These nouns are old present participles, corresponding to nouns in -nt in Latin and Greek.
These nouns correspond to the consonant declensions in Latin and Greek (in both cases, part of the third declension). Only traces of masculines are extant, but feminines are fairly well attested.
The only masculine nouns extant are "month" (gen. sg. or , dat. pl. ); "ruler" (gen. sg. , dat. pl. ); and "witness" (gen. sg., dat. pl. not attested).
There are nine feminine nouns attested. Note the following irregularities:
The other five feminine nouns are "temple", "city", "breast", "milk", and "racecourse".
Adjectives in Gothic, as in the other Germanic languages, can be declined according to two different paradigms, commonly called "strong" and "weak". This represents a significant innovation in Germanic, although a similar development has taken place in the Baltic and Slavic languages.
Adjectives in Proto-Indo-European -- as is still the case in Latin, Greek, and most other daughtersâÂÂare declined in exactly the same way as nouns. Germanic "strong" adjectives, however, take many of their endings from the declension of pronouns. These pronominal endings are likely to have entered the adjective inflection in the Germanic proto-language, via the inflection of possessive adjectives and other "pronominal" word classes, as evidenced by the variation between the bare stem and -ata in the neuter nominative and accusative singular of Gothic adjectives and possessive pronouns. "Weak" adjectives take the endings of -n stem nouns, regardless of the underlying stem class of the adjective.
In general, weak adjectival endings are used when the adjective is accompanied by a definite article, and strong endings are used in other situations. However, weak endings are occasionally used in the absence of a definite article, and cause the associated noun to have the same semantics as if a definite article were present. Weak adjectives are also used when the associated noun is in the vocative case. In addition, some adjectives are always declined weak or strong, regardless of any accompanying articles.
Similar to the situation with nouns, the ja-stem adjectives are divided into two subtypes, depending on whether the stem is short or long.
This declension has only the following extant adjectives: "other", "free" (stem , see below), "perfect", "willing", "middle", "new", "true", "evil-doing", and "lawless". Notes about the above adjectives:
This declension is built out of long-stemmed -ja masculine and neuter nouns and long-stemmed -jà  feminine nouns.
This declension has only five extant adjectives: "astray", "old", "old", "wild", and "sweet". None of these adjectives are extent in any genitive singular forms, and hence the forms given above are reconstructions based on the behavior of the corresponding nouns. The hesitation between or as the neuter genitive singular form stems from the following facts:
Adjectives of this class have replaced most forms with forms taken from the -ja declension. Only the nominative singular, the neuter accusative singular and the masculine and neuter genitive singular have genuine -i stem forms.
The following adjectives of this type are extant (along with a few others): "hidden", "visible", "pleasant", "desert", "useful", "well-behaved", "common", "clean", "kind", "beautiful", "clear", () "sweet".
Similarly to -i stem adjectives, -u stem adjectives have replaced most forms with those taken from the -ja declension.
The following adjectives of this type are extant: "narrow", "difficult", "hard", "soft", "heavy", "ready", "gentle", "late", "steadfast", "twelve years old", "withered", "soft".
Weak adjectival endings are taken from the corresponding endings of masculine, feminine and neuter n-stems, e.g. masculine "man", feminine "tongue", neuter "heart". All adjectives have the same endings, regardless of the underlying stem class of the adjective. The only difference is that ja-stems, i-stems and u-stems have a -j- at the end of the stem, e.g. masculine singular nominative weak "new", "wild", "clean", "hard", corresponding to the strong forms (short ja-stem), (long ja-stem), (i-stem), (u-stem).
Gothic possessive pronouns are formed by adding the above shown suffixes to the genitive ("possessor") form of the given personal pronoun. Reflexive pronouns are inflected similarly. The form used outside of possession is derived from the nominative feminine singular. The possessor suffixes are the same in the possessee plural. "my, mine" and "our, ours" are shown here for example, but others can apply.
Compound forms with the suffix -(u)h meaning "this, these; that/ those" and with -ei creating relative pronouns also exist. The suffix -ei can also be added to first and second person pronouns to create first and second person relatives. All compound forms drop the "u" in -uh after a vowel and change word-final -s to a -z if the next letter is a vowel.
The plural form (masculine accusative) occurs once as part of the indefinite pronoun "each, every"; the other plurals are reconstructed. Hwas is declined irregular, but shares similar forms with sa, the others are declined mostly like strong (j)a-stem adjectives. Hwaþar is only extant in the nominative masculine singular and neuter singular nominative/ accusative; the other forms are reconstructed.
The following additional pronouns exist, all declined strong as a-stems:
Three indefinite pronouns are formed by appending -uh "and" to the interrogative pronouns "who, what", "which (of many)", and "which of two"; compare the analogously formed Latin pronoun "each", formed from "who" and "and". Both and mean "each, every"; means "each of two".
Before -uh, -s appears in the original form of -z-, and after long vowels and stressed short vowels, the u of -uh is elided. Unstressed short vowels are dropped before -uh in the declension of ; however, in the other two pronouns, long vowels appear in place of unstressed short vowels, preserving an older state of affairs, and the u of -uh is elided. Declension tables of and are presented below. Of , only a single form is extant, the dative singular , occurring in the compound form "to each one of two".
The plural form (masculine accusative) occurs once, in the expression "he sent them forth two and two".
Additional pronominal forms are
Hund and Ã¾à «sundi can mean either "100" and "1000" or "120" and "1200", depending on scale. TáihuntÃÂhund always means "100". ÃÂins has two different ordinals.
Numbers below 20 behave as adjectives, whereas those starting at 20 behave as nouns and govern the genitive case of an associated object, e.g. dagàfidwà Âr tiguns "for forty days", fimf Ã¾à «sundjà Âs waÃÂrà"five thousand men", miþ twáim tigum Ã¾à «sundjà  mannà"with twenty thousand men". Ordinal numbers are always adjectives.
Plural forms of áins meaning "some" also occur, otherwise the numbers are always declined as plural.
Higher numbers from fidwà Âr "four" through niuntaÃÂhun "nineteen" are normally undeclined, but can be declined as -i stems, e.g. dative fidwà Ârim, genitive *fidwà ÂrÃÂ.
Decades sibuntÃÂhund "seventy", ahtáutÃÂhund "eighty", niuntÃÂhund "ninety" and taÃÂhuntÃÂhund/taÃÂhuntaÃÂhund "one hundred" are normally undeclined, but genitive niuntÃÂhundis "of ninety" occurs.
A handful of numerals are declined irregularly, shown below:
Notes:
"Both" is bái or bajà Âþs, of which the following forms are extant:
The extant forms of match the corresponding forms of "two", and evidence from other Germanic languages, e.g. Old English, indicates that all forms are constructed in this fashion.
Distributive numerals answer the question "how many at a time?". The isolated form "two each" exists, declined as a plural strong adjective. Otherwise, distributive numerals are expressed using prepositional phrases, e.g. "by twos or at most by threes"; "by fifties in each (company)"; "he sent them forth two and two".
Multiplicative numerals answer the question "how many times more?" and are formed by adding the adjectival stem to the stem of the corresponding cardinal. Extant are "onefold, simple"; "fourfold" (note, not ); "hundredfold"; "manifold".
Numeral adverbs answer the question "how often?" or "how many times?". They are formed by combining the cardinal or ordinal with the noun "time" (lit. "a going"), and placing the result in the dative case: "once"; "a second time"; "twice"; "thrice"; "five times"; "seven times". Compare Old English "once", "five times".