Definition of Accusative. Meaning of Accusative. Synonyms of Accusative

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Accusative. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Accusative and, of course, Accusative synonyms and on the right images related to the word Accusative.

Definition of Accusative

Accusative
Accusative Ac*cu"sa*tive, a. [F. accusatif, L. accusativus (in sense 2), fr. accusare. See Accuse.] 1. Producing accusations; accusatory. ``This hath been a very accusative age.' --Sir E. Dering. 2. (Gram.) Applied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which the action or influence of a transitive verb terminates, or the immediate object of motion or tendency to, expressed by a preposition. It corresponds to the objective case in English.
Accusative
Accusative Ac*cu"sa*tive, n. (Gram.) The accusative case.

Meaning of Accusative from wikipedia

- 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 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...
- In grammar, accusative and infinitive (also Accusativus **** infinitivo or accusative plus infinitive, frequently abbreviated ACI or A+I) is the name for...
- grammatical system of a language. This is in contrast with nominative-accusative and ergative-absolutive alignment languages, in which the argument of...
- groups: those that are morphologically ergative but syntactically behave as accusative (for instance, Basque, Pashto and Urdu) and those that, on top of being...
- represent the perceiver and the accusative pronouns me/them represent the phenomenon perceived. Here, nominative and accusative are cases, that is, categories...
- with the accusative (comparable to the oblique or disjunctive in some other languages): I (accusative me), we (accusative us), he (accusative him), she...
- neuter nouns, the nominative, vocative, and accusative cases are identical. The nominative, vocative, and accusative plural almost always ends in -a. (Both...
- 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...