- An
adessive case (abbreviated ADE; from
Latin adesse "to be
present (at)": ad "at" + esse "to be") is a
grammatical case
generally denoting location at...
- 'in
close proximity of' mäellä = "on the hill"
ovella = "at the door"
Adessive is also used with the verb 'olla' to
indicate possession minulla on kirja...
- the top of the table). In addition, it is the
logical complement of the
adessive case for
referring to "being
around the place". For example,
koululle means...
-
three additional varieties of the
locative case are found: illative,
adessive and allative. The most
common are the illative,
which is
still used, mostly...
- inessive)[clarification needed]. Some (the comitative, equative, and
adessive) are
secondary beyond any doubt.
Definiteness in the Iron
dialect is, according...
-
present in
Turkish as well as in Tamil. Also,
Uralic languages reuse the
adessive case
where available,
locative case if not, to mark the same category,...
- "table – off from the table". It is an
outer locative case, used like the
adessive and
allative cases, to
denote both
being on top of
something and "being...
- inessive/
adessive – elative/ablative): kuhu – kus – kust (where),
millal (when),
kuidas (how), miks (why)
existential (illative/allative – inessive/
adessive –...
-
reconstructed Proto-Finnic
ending *-ssa/*-ssä (from
earlier *-s-na/*-s-nä). The
adessive case
referring to
external location (being on, at), with the reconstructed...
- völ). al and el are
vocalized to ou or uu (el may also
become üu) in the
adessive and
ablative case
forms (talvel > touvuu/touvüu, mägelpäi > mäguupei)....