- In grammar, the
inessive case (abbreviated INE; from Latin:
inesse "to be in or at") is a
locative grammatical case. This case
carries the
basic meaning...
-
their basic meaning correspond to
locational prepositions in English. The
inessive carries the
basic meaning "inside" or "in"
talossa = "in the house" It...
- [-aj or -ej];
added to
Inessive):
means 'out of' or 'in
return for'.
Superessive case (ending -л [-l];
added to the
Inessive):
means 'on', and also to...
-
koululla (at the
school including the schoolyard), as
contrasted with the
inessive koulussa (in the school,
inside the building). In Estonian, the ending...
- plural, its
marker is -t,
which is
preceded by the
plural marker -j. The
inessive marker is -n in the
singular and the plural, when it is then
preceded by...
-
postposition of location, or (to
borrow a term from
Finnish grammar) an
inessive suffix."
Fictional languages Constructed languages Tolkien, J. R. R. "Words...
- as
three (nominative,
genitive and
inessive) to as many as six (nominative, dative, ablative, directive,
inessive)[clarification needed]. Some (the comitative...
-
original locative in
singular and to the
inessive in plural. The
allative added *-pie > -p(i) to the genitive. The
inessive has
become the
modern locative case...
- is no
adjective declension as in the
inessive noun
phrase бадӟым гуртын ("in a big village"; cf.
Finnish inessive phrase isossa kylässä, in
which iso "large"...
- kotona. Example: Luen lehtiä kotona. "I read
newspapers at home." If the
inessive were used, kodissani, it
would distinguish the
activity from
reading the...