possessive case การใช้
- Personal pronouns have Unmarked, Nominative, Accusative and Possessive case forms.
- :The subject is fairly well covered in Wikipedia at Possessive apostrophe, which is linked from Possessive case.
- These common features include the postposed definite articles and the merger of the dative case and possessive case.
- Is " whose " the correct possessive case relative pronoun for " that " or for inanimate objects?
- Other common surname suffixes are-ov or-in which is the Slavic possessive case suffix, thus Nikola's son becomes " Nikolin,"
- It also shows the possessive case-" the Queen's peace " or ( in the plural ) " the Sirens'song ".
- Wallace viewed the expression " gift of the Holy Spirit " from Acts 2 : 38 as in the possessive case.
- The word " Landsraad " is a compound word meaning " council of the land " ( the's'indicates possessive case ).
- The possessive case ( apostrophe and " s " ) was soon dropped in speech, fueling the assumption that it's German.
- The possessive case for the nouns maybe formed by adding an apostrophe s ( s or s ) to the word.
- In possessive constructions the nak / nek endings are also used but this is NOT the dative form ( rather, the attributive or possessive case)
- In Possessive case, it should be noted that plural nouns and other nouns ending in " s " are written with the apostrophe AFTER the " s ."
- I always understood that the possessive case is denoted by either an apostrophe and " s " or by the word " of " ( among other ways ).
- Likewise, in the possessive case, belonging to her companion ?! ?????????????????, the " lamed " in the preposition ?? is written with the vowel " pata % ".
- :There really isn't a possessive case in English; it's the genitive case, and people are often confused by their mistaken belief that the only time it is used is to show possession.
- Pravic reflects many aspects of the philosophical foundations of utopian anarchism, for instance, the use of the possessive case is strongly discouraged ( a feature that also is reflected by the novel's title ).
- Possessives are sometimes regarded as a grammatical case ( the "'possessive case "'), although they are also sometimes considered to represent the genitive case, or are not assigned to any case, depending on which language is being considered.
- Modern English nouns exhibit only one inflection of the reference form : the possessive case, which some linguists argue is not a case at all, but a clitic ( see the entry for genitive case for more information ).
- 'Ma'( " my " ) is used in the possessive case and is prefixed to the noun to indicate the possessed, in'intimate or nontransferable'possession; examples include words such as'maa?ki'( " my hand " ), from the original word'saki'( " hand " ).
- For example, the following footnote from his grammar is, in turn, descriptive and prescriptive : " " Whose " is by some authors made the Possessive Case of " which ", and applied to things as well as persons; I think, improperly ."
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