accusative case การใช้
- Only the accusative case for indefinite masculine nouns is often marked.
- For morphosyntactic alignment, many Australian languages have nominative accusative case marking.
- In contrast, regular nouns do not have a distinct accusative case.
- Those orders are permitted in Sakha if accusative case is overtly expressed:
- That is, it isn't actually accusative case any more.
- This difference is observable only for masculine nouns in nominative or accusative case.
- In nominative accusative languages, the accusative case, which marks the patient ).
- Note that a morphologically distinct accusative case exists in Finnish only for the following pronouns:
- Me, him, her, us, them are mainly in the Accusative case.
- Westrobothnian has three grammatical genders in most dialects, two plural forms of accusative case.
- This preposition functions like accusative case.
- In German, for example, accusative case is always overt on arguments with masculine gender.
- In a verbal sentence, the subject takes nominative case and the object takes accusative case.
- Nominative means it is the subject of the sentence; accusative case is used for the direct object.
- In particular, the accusative case is assigned through a structural relation between the verbal head and its complement.
- For example, support accounting for accusative case in Latin-type case marked languages could be presented as:
- The existence or nonexistence of an accusative case in Finnish thus depends on one's point of view.
- Pronouns are identical in all cases, though exceptionally the accusative case may be marked, as for nouns.
- The phenomenon of ECM makes it evident that accusative case is not necessarily assigned to the complement of the assigner.
- So an'accusative verb'is one which would have an object in the accusative case if used transitively.
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