Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet ACCUSATIVE
ACCUSATIVE
Definition av ACCUSATIVE
- ackusativ
- anklagande
- ackusativisk
Antal bokstäver
10
Är palindrom
Nej
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Exempel på hur du använder ACCUSATIVE i en mening
- In the English language, the only words that occur in the accusative case are pronouns: "me", "him", "her", "us", "whom", and "them".
- In languages which mark grammatical case, it is common to differentiate the objects of a ditransitive verb using, for example, the accusative case for the direct object, and the dative case for the indirect object (but this morphological alignment is not unique; see below).
- Neuter nouns differ from masculine and feminine in two ways: (1) the plural nominative and accusative forms end in -a, e.
- Pennsylvania Dutch has three cases for personal pronouns: the accusative, nominative, and dative, and two cases for nouns: the common case, with both accusative and nominative functions, and the dative case.
- Thou is the nominative form; the oblique/objective form is thee (functioning as both accusative and dative); the possessive is thy (adjective) or thine (as an adjective before a vowel or as a possessive pronoun); and the reflexive is thyself.
- In the local Greek dialect, the city is still known as "ta Serras" (τα Σέρρας), which is actually a corruption of the plural accusative "tas Serras" (τας Σέρρας) of the archaic form "Serrae".
- Old Frisian had three genders (masculine, feminine, and neuter), two numbers (singular and plural), and four cases (Nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, although traces of an instrumental and locative case exist).
- The term objective case is generally preferred by modern English grammarians, where it supplanted Old English's dative and accusative.
- As in Standard German there are four cases in Northern Bavarian: nominative, accusative, genitive and dative.
- He documents what changes the language seems to have undergone, notably the leveling of several cases including the accusative and partitive.
- The former Dutch case system resembled that of modern German, and distinguished four cases: nominative (subject), genitive (possession or relation), dative (indirect object, object of preposition) and accusative (direct object, object of preposition).
- Middle High German nouns were declined according to four cases (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative), two numbers (singular and plural) and three genders (masculine, feminine and neuter), much like Modern High German, though there are several important differences.
- Irish has four cases: common (usually called the nominative, but it covers the role of the accusative as well), vocative, genitive, and the dative or prepositional case.
- Southern Sámi nouns inflect for singular and plural and have eight cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, illative, locative, elative, comitative, and essive, but number is not distinguished in the essive.
- Russian also places the accusative case between the dative and the instrumental, and in the tables below, the accusative case appears between the nominative and genitive cases.
- English, for example, once had an extensive declension system that specified distinct accusative and dative case forms for both nouns and pronouns.
- There are 6 cases (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, locative, and instrumental) and 3 numbers (singular, dual, and plural).
- They are originally the accusative and dative or ablative forms of a verbal noun in the fourth declension, respectively.
- The origins of the name Demogorgon are not entirely clear, though the most prevalent scholarly view now considers it to be a misreading of the Greek δημιουργόν (dēmiourgón, accusative case form of δημιουργός, 'demiurge') based on the manuscript variations in the earliest known explicit reference in Lactantius Placidus (Jahnke 1898, Sweeney 1997, Solomon 2012).
- Ergative languages are classified into two groups: those that are morphologically ergative but syntactically behave as accusative (for instance, Basque, Pashto and Urdu) and those that, on top of being ergative morphologically, also show ergativity in syntax.
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