<Dictionary>
  <Entry>
    <ID>1024</ID>
    <SortID>1050</SortID>
    <Lemma>gaits</Lemma>
    <LemmaType>1</LemmaType>
    <Inflected>false</Inflected>
    <Irregular>false</Irregular>
    <POS>4</POS>
    <Morphology>16</Morphology>
    <MorphologyUncertain>false</MorphologyUncertain>
    <WSPage>44</WSPage>
    <WSPosition>23</WSPosition>
    <WSLetter>g</WSLetter>
    <WSClass>30</WSClass>
    <WSClassImplied>false</WSClassImplied>
    <WSReconstruction>false</WSReconstruction>
    <WSConjecture>false</WSConjecture>
    <WSUnclear>false</WSUnclear>
    <Translation>Ziege</Translation>
    <Comment2>[Ebbinghaus 1981, §103.A6]: "Auch ahaks und gaits werden allgemein hierher gestellt, obwohl sie ihrer Bildung nach zu den Konsonantstämmen §116 gehören. Die belegten Formen NSg. ahaks, gaits, ASg. ahak, GDPl. ahakê, ahakim lassen nicht erkennen, ob die Wörter tatsächlich zur i-Dekl. übergetreten sind."</Comment2>
    <Problematic>false</Problematic>
    <Verified>true</Verified>
    <VerificationTS>2003-09-19T12:45:32+02:00</VerificationTS>
    <ARCHIVE_StatusTS>2002-06-11T18:43:03+02:00</ARCHIVE_StatusTS>
    <ARCHIVE_Morphology>16</ARCHIVE_Morphology>
    <Gomorph.Name>Fi</Gomorph.Name>
    <Gomorph.Description>Feminine i-stems [St §152; BE §102-103]</Gomorph.Description>
    <LemmaTypes.Name>Normal</LemmaTypes.Name>
    <LemmaTypes.Description>Normal lemma.</LemmaTypes.Description>
    <POSTags.Name>Noun, common, feminine</POSTags.Name>
    <WSClasses.Name>Fi</WSClasses.Name>
  </Entry>
  <UnambiguousToken>
    <Tokens.ID>64873</Tokens.ID>
    <Books.ID>18</Books.ID>
    <Books.Name>Nehemiah</Books.Name>
    <Segments.N1>5</Segments.N1>
    <Segments.N2>18</Segments.N2>
    <Manuscripts.Code>D</Manuscripts.Code>
    <Tokens.Position>12</Tokens.Position>
    <Tokens.Type>gaits</Tokens.Type>
  </UnambiguousToken>
</Dictionary>