Talk:Sandrocottus

German declension
The younger declension can be added by these templates:

Without the definite article:

With the definite article:

But: It makes sense for a proper noun which became a common noun, like Krösus as a proper noun being the name of a king, and Krösus as a common noun meaning ' rich man or person  '. The common noun could even have a plural *Krösi or *Krösusse. The indefinite article could also be used like ein Sandrocottus meaning a man named Sandrocottus, which too could have a plural like for example drei *Sandrocotti or drei *Sandrocottusse meaning three men, each named Sandrocottus. But both usages don't seem to make sense for Sandrocottus and should be unattestable. -80.133.109.90 19:14, 30 June 2017 (UTC)
 * It's somewhat contradicting: "Without the definite article" and "With the definite article", but "(der)".
 * It would look much better in a single table, which should be makeable.
 * The indefinite article usually makes no sense.