elative การใช้
- The paradigm usually consists of the inessive, elative and illative cases.
- Plural illative, inessive, elative, allative, adessive, ablative, translative have a short form in some words.
- As in the singular, possessive suffixes follow the instrumental, inessive, illative, elative, egressive, terminative and prolative cases.
- Elative ( gradation ) says the masculine singular elative case makes aCCaC; therefore for the adjectival U鄈him its elatend must be-郩kh鄊.
- Elative ( gradation ) says the masculine singular elative case makes aCCaC; therefore for the adjectival U鄈him its elatend must be-郩kh鄊.
- The usual degrees of comparison are the " positive ", which simply denotes a property ( as with the elative in Semitic linguistics ).
- Generally, Hungary itself and most Hungarian cities are placed into the delative case ( foreign cities and some Hungarian cities use the elative case in this context ).
- The possessive suffix follows the instrumental, inessive, illative, elative egressive, terminative and prolative cases and the vowel reduces to " K " in the singular persons.
- However, there are several words that have particular feminine and plural forms when the elative is prefixed with the definite article, although the agreement is not always observed in modern usage.
- When adding a possessive suffix, the inessive and illative forms change to "-0-" and the elative form changes to "-KALB-".
- This is the origin of the three-way systems as the three different ones in Karelian Finnish ( illative / inessive / elative, allative / adessive / ablative, translative / essive / excessive ).
- However, in highly inflected languages, a tradename may have to carry case endings in usage, for example in Finnish " Microsoft in " ( genitive case ) and " Facebook ista " ( elative case ).
- Besides the superlative proper, sometimes called " relative superlative ", there is also an " absolute superlative " or elative, expressing the meaning " very . . . ", for example ?????????? means " very beautiful ".
- In modern Finnish, it has been superseded by a more complicated system of locative cases and enclitics, and the original-s has merged with another lative or locative suffix and turned into the modern inessive, elative, illative and even translative suffixes.
- Adjectives follow the noun they are modifying, and agree with the noun in case, gender, number, and state : For example, " "'a beautiful girl'but " "'the beautiful girl'. ( Compare " "'the girl is beautiful'. ) Elative adjectives, however, usually don't agree with the noun they modify, and sometimes even precede their noun while requiring it to be in the genitive case.