- In grammar, the
accusative case (abbreviated ACC) of a noun is the
grammatical case used to
receive the
direct object of a
transitive verb. In the English...
- In grammar,
accusative and
infinitive (also
Accusativus ****
infinitivo or
accusative plus infinitive,
frequently abbreviated ACI or A+I) is the name for...
- In
linguistic typology, nominative–
accusative alignment is a type of
morphosyntactic alignment in
which subjects of
intransitive verbs are
treated like...
- The
accusative absolute is a
grammatical construction found in some languages. It is an
absolute construction found in the
accusative case. In ancient...
-
represent the
perceiver and the
accusative pronouns me/them
represent the
phenomenon perceived. Here,
nominative and
accusative are cases, that is, categories...
- sentence,
their form
changes to one of the five
cases (nominative, vocative,
accusative, genitive, or dative). The set of
forms that a noun will take for each...
- groups:
those that are
morphologically ergative but
syntactically behave as
accusative (for instance, Basque,
Pashto and Urdu) and
those that, on top of being...
-
grammatical system of a language. This is in
contrast with nominative-
accusative and ergative-absolutive
alignment languages, in
which the
argument of...
- with the
accusative (comparable to the
oblique or
disjunctive in some
other languages): I (
accusative me), we (
accusative us), he (
accusative him), she...
-
genitive and
accusative are
easily distinguishable from each other, e.g., kuä'cǩǩmi "eagles' (genitive plural)" and kuä'cǩǩmid "eagles (
accusative plural)"...