The table shows the breakdown of the word into it’s parts, the type of word (eg, V for Verb, PRON for
Pronoun), and its conjugation or declension. It then displays the case (for verbs, this is the tense,
voice, and mood). It then shows the person (ie, Singluar, or Plural), and the gender (eg, Masculine).
Underneath that, information on the stem is shown, and beneath that, possible translations.
If the word is ambiguous in Whitaker’s processing, each possible breakdown will be shown. The ones that
share a stem will be listed together, with one set of translations. The ones that involve different stems
will be shown in new sections.
Multiple words entered on one line are separated and processed in order. If whitakers-words notices a
prefix or a suffix, it will treat it as a separate word.
To read more about whitakers-words, see the Readme installed at /usr/share/doc/whitakers-words/Readme.md,
or the help displayed at program start.
Whitaker’s word is an old program, and the best documentation for its behavior is its' ADA source.