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Some Related Sentences

nominative and
* nina ( nominative: nose ) nina ( genitive: of nose ) ninaga ( comitative: with a nose )
* koer ( nominative: dog ) koera ( genitive: of dog ) koeraga ( comitative: with a dog )
* leht ( nominative: leaf, page ) lehte ( partitive: leaf ) lehtede ( genitive: of leaves ) lehtedega ( comitative: with leaves )
This is a pattern observed in Baltic-Finnic consonant gradation, where the strong grade ( often, but not necessarily nominative ) form of the word is degeminated into a weak grade ( often all other cases ) form of the word, e. g. taakka taakan ( burden, of the burden ).
Alternation is also common in declension of nouns, e. g. from nominative to locative, tło na tle ( ).
* * πάντ-ς πᾶς " every, whole " ( masculine nominative singular )
* * όντ-ι ̯ ᾰ * όντσα οὖσα participle " being " ( feminine nominative singular )

nominative and partitive
With numbers, Finnish does not use plurals but partitive singular forms: " 10 markkaa " and " 10 penniä " ( the nominative is penni ).
The case with an unspecified identity is onko teillä kirjoja, which uses the partitive, because it refers to unspecified books, as contrasted to nominative onko teillä ( ne ) kirjat ?, which means " do you have ( those ) books?
Akkala Sami has 8 cases, singular and plural: nominative, genitive-accusative, partitive, dative-illative, locative, essive, comitative and abessive.

nominative and genitive
Most modern English grammarians no longer use the Latin accusative / dative model, though they tend to use the terms objective for oblique, subjective for nominative, and possessive for genitive ( see Declension in English ).
In the classical period of Greek mythology, Artemis ( Greek: ( nominative ), ( genitive ) ) was often described as the daughter of Zeus and Leto, and the twin sister of Apollo.
*** For nouns, The is for the nominative, for the accusative, and for the genitive.
The word dragon entered the English language in the early 13th century from Old French dragon, which in turn comes from Latin draconem ( nominative draco ) meaning " huge serpent, dragon ," from the Greek word δράκων, drakon ( genitive drakontos, δράκοντος ) " serpent, giant seafish ", which is believed to have come from an earlier stem drak -, a stem of derkesthai, " to see clearly ," from Proto-Indo-European derk-" to see " or " the one with the ( deadly ) glance.
In linguistics, declension is the inflection of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and articles to indicate number ( at least singular and plural ), case ( nominative or subjective, genitive or possessive, etc.
Sanskrit has eight cases: nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative, ablative, locative and instrumental.
Nouns and adjectives have two cases, nominative / oblique and accusative / allative, and two numbers, singular and plural ; the adjectival form of personal pronouns behaves like a genitive case.
Many aspects of the syntax of Greek have remained constant: verbs agree with their subject only, the use of the surviving cases is largely intact ( nominative for subjects and predicates, accusative for objects of most verbs and many prepositions, genitive for possessors ), articles precede nouns, adpositions are largely prepositional, relative clauses follow the noun they modify, relative pronouns are clause-initial.
This occurs in the context of Irenaeus ' work On the Detection and Overthrow of Knowledge Falsely So Called, ( Greek: elenchos kai anatrope tes pseudonymou gnoseos genitive case, ἔλεγχος καὶ ἀνατροπὴ τῆς ψευδωνύμου γνώσεως ) where the term " knowledge falsely so-called " ( nominative case pseudonymos gnosis ) covers various groups, not just Valentinus, and is a quotation of the apostle Paul's warning against " knowledge falsely so-called " in 1 Timothy 6: 20.
The interrogative personal pronoun who exhibits the greatest diversity of forms within the modern English pronoun system having definite nominative, oblique, and genitive forms ( who, whom, whose ) and equivalently coordinating indefinite forms ( whoever, whomever, and whosoever ).
The grammarian Pāṇini identified six semantic roles or karaka, which are related to the seven Sanskrit cases ( nominative, accusative, instrumental, dative, ablative, genitive, and locative ), but not in a one-to-one way.
* Retention of the nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative, locative and vocative cases, but loss of the instrumental
A complete Latin noun declension consists of seven grammatical cases: nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative, ablative and locative.
There were two numbers, three genders and four cases ( nominative, accusative, genitive and dative ).
It was fully inflected with five grammatical cases ( nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, and instrumental ), three grammatical numbers ( singular, plural, and dual ) and three grammatical genders ( masculine, feminine, and neuter ).
The second major manuscript variant is either Mentonomon ( nominative case ) or Metuonidis ( genitive case ).
Danann is also a genitive, for which the nominative case is not attested.
Latin Annus ( a 2nd declension masculine noun ; annum is the accusative singular ; anni is genitive singular and nominative plural ; anno the dative and ablative singular ) is from a PIE noun, which also yielded Gothic aþnam " year ".
The language has six grammatical cases: nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative and locative, and a complex morphology with a variety of moods.
In the declension of nouns, five cases are the same as in Old Prussian: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, vocative.
Nominals can be declined in three grammatical genders ( masculine, feminine, neuter ), three numbers ( singular, plural, dual ) and seven cases: nominative, vocative, accusative, instrumental, dative, genitive, and locative.

nominative and with
It is a noun that is having something done to it, usually joined ( such as in Latin ) with the nominative case, making it an indirect object.
In addition to indicating direct objects, the accusative / allative case is used with nouns, adjectives and adverbs to show the destination of a motion, or to replace certain prepositions ; the nominative / oblique is used in all other situations.
In many European languages, the word for " case " is cognate to the English word, all stemming from the Latin casus, related to the verb cadere, " to fall ", with the sense that all other cases have fallen away from the nominative.
Most English personal pronouns have five forms ; in addition to the nominative and oblique case forms, the possessive case has both a determiner form ( such as my, our ) and a distinct independent form ( such as mine, ours ) ( with the exceptions that these are not distinct for the third person singular masculine car, it is his and that the third person singular neuter it does not have the possessive independent form ); and they have a distinct reflexive or intensive form ( such as myself, ourselves ).
Third declension adjectives with one ending have single nominative ending for all genders.
The nominative case often indicates the subject of a verb but sometimes does not indicate any particular relationship with other parts of a sentence.
Moreover, in most languages with a nominative case, the nominative form is the lemma ; that is, it is the reference form used to cite a word, to list it as a dictionary entry, etc.
English still retains some nominative pronouns, which are contrasted with the accusative ( comparable to the oblique or disjunctive in some other languages ): I ( accusative, me ), we ( accusative, us ), he ( accusative, him ), she ( accusative, her ), they ( accusative, them ) and who ( accusative, whom ).
The name Isis is the Greek version of her name, with a final-s added to the original Egyptian form because of the grammatical requirements of the Greek language (- s often being a marker of the nominative case in ancient Greek ).
** Compare with nominative case: " onko teillä kirjat?
It is the oblique case of the nominative trobaire “ composer ”, related to trobar “ to compose, to discuss, to invent ” cognative with Old French trover “ to compose something in verses ” ( Wace, Brut, editions I. Arnold, 3342 ) “ to invent, to create ” ( E. Deschamps, Poésies morales et historiques, 261 in T .- L .) > modern French trouver “ to find ”, first mentioned as trover with the close signification " to meet, to discover " in the 10th and 11th century, before the other one.
The early Brythonic cu has become Welsh ci, genitive or nominative plural cwn, the word for hound or dog, with a positive military connotation in the sense of the dangerous hound or hounds of war.
Typologically, it is a highly agglutinating language with subject – verb – object word order and nominative – accusative morphosyntactic alignment.
Angiras ( अ ं ग ि रस ्, pronounced as / əngirəs /; nominative singular Angirā, अ ं ग ि र ा, pronounced as / əngirα :/) is a rishi ( or sage ) who, along with sage Atharvan, is credited to have formulated (" heard ") most of the fourth Veda called Atharvaveda.

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