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ablative case การใช้

"ablative case" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • There is marginal occurrence of subjects taking ablative case as well.
  • In ablative, thus the ablative case has the same functions.
  • The agent also loses ergative case marking as an adjunct and acquires ablative case instead.
  • An ablative case is also recognized, normally attached outside the genitive but with different allomorphs for animate and inanimate referents.
  • In Latin grammar, the ablative absolute ( Latin : ablativus absolutus ) is a noun phrase cast in the ablative case.
  • A Latin rhyme for remembering the list of Latin prepositions that take the ablative case is given by William Windham Bradley:
  • The subject of comparison can be expressed either in the ablative case or with the postposition " AO @ KAL " structure.
  • All of the examples in Genesis 11 look like durations to me, so why are so many put in the ablative case?
  • Although not all of these words take the ablative case in every context, all of them do take it some of the time.
  • :It appears to be the Latin dative / ablative case plural form of the Greek word meaning " a set of seven ".
  • The-phi suffix corresponds to ablative case endings in some other Indo-European languages, but doesn't really have an " ablative " meaning in Greek.
  • The ablative case emerged in Latvian under the circumstances of shifting the government of almost all prepositions in the plural to the dative form.
  • Therefore, almost all the prepositions that governed the genitive started taking the dative-instrumental case in the plural, giving a new birth to the ablative case.
  • Medieval folio ", " leaf, page " ablative case of Latin folium ), then stacked together like a newspaper and sewn together at the fold.
  • However, the noun in the ablative case cannot recur in the same sentence, hence the name absolute, derived from the Latin word " absolvere " meaning " to loosen from ".
  • While the instrumental case is the form most commonly used for this purpose, when coupled with the passive voice in Armenian the instrumental case can be replaced with the ablative case.
  • The oblique I case is used as prepositional case as well as in the past tense as the subject of transitive verbs, and the oblique II case is used as ablative case.
  • With my knowledge of case ( and assuming we're dealing with a Latin-like language )'the wallet'should be in the nominative case,'Renee'should be in the accusative case, and'the theif'should be in the ablative case.
  • For example,'in'takes the ablative case when expressing location, as in " He is in Italy, " but takes the accusative case when it is expressing motion, such as " He went into Italy ."
  • In Latin, the agent of a passive sentence ( if indicated ) is expressed using a noun in the ablative case, in this case " servM " ( the ablative of " servus " ).
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