Appendix:Slovene nouns/first feminine declension

The first feminine declension follow all feminine nouns that have ending in genitive singular and don't have ending  in genitive dual/plural. Nouns can follow all four accentual patterns, although the mobile accent is very rare and mobile accent is archaic or literary.

Basic sample
There are two different subpatterns; the first one is from Proto-Slavic a-stem declension and the second is from Proto-Slavic v-stem declension. Both declensions have merged in most forms, but some are still distinct, most notably nominative singular.

Alterations
Note: the second form is, if not otherwise denoted, in genitive singular


 * Some rare nouns get infix -n-


 * Some nouns have in nominative singular ending -e ( Melpomene), silent -e ( Marguerite ), -o ( Klȋe), or a null ending ( Artẹ̑mide), but most of them also have regular vernacular versions . The non-vernacular versions can also be declined following the third feminine declension.


 * Latin and Greek names can change the stem from -s to -d ( Artẹ̑mide), -n ( Salamȋne), or -r ( Cȇrere). These also have vernacular versions for nominative singular.


 * Some mixed accent nouns can in gentitive dual/plural also have ending -a ( genitive dual/plural vód/vodā, genitive dual/plural cẹ̑rkəv/cerkvā) or -i ( genitive dual/plural besedī)


 * Nouns ending in a sonorant have an added fill vowel in genitive dual/plural. The fill vowel is usually, except before -j-, where the fill vowel is . In some words, the fill vowel is not written, only pronounced (note that lj and nj represent only one sound when not followed by a vowel): genitive dual/plural dẹ̑kəl 'maidservant',  genitive dual/plural lȃdij 'ship',  genitive dual/plural zēməlj 'soil'.


 * Nouns of which the stem ends in a vowel also have an added -j in genitive dual/plural if without an ending: genitive dual/plural ọ̑boj etc.


 * The noun is irregular and has acute accent on all the endings except in vocative.


 * Nouns and  have different endings due to the former r-stem declension.

Common colloquial or archaic additional forms

 * Vernacular disyllabic nouns that have stress on open-mid first syllable have obsolete forms with short accent on the last syllable, which is still present in some dialects.


 * All v-stem nouns, as well as have fully assimilated with a-stem nouns in many dialects.