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Genitive case

In grammar, the genitive case (abbreviated gen)[2] is the grammatical case that marks a word, usually a noun, as modifying another word, also usually a noun—thus indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun.[3] A genitive can also serve purposes indicating other relationships. For example, some verbs may feature arguments in the genitive case; and the genitive case may also have adverbial uses (see adverbial genitive).

Cuneiform inscription Lugal Kiengi Kiuri 𒈗𒆠𒂗𒄀𒆠𒌵, "King of Sumer and Akkad", on a seal of Sumerian king Shulgi (r. c. 2094–2047 BCE). The final ke4 𒆤 is the composite of -k (genitive case) and -e (ergative case).[1]

The genitive construction includes the genitive case, but is a broader category. Placing a modifying noun in the genitive case is one way of indicating that it is related to a head noun, in a genitive construction. However, there are other ways to indicate a genitive construction. For example, many Afroasiatic languages place the head noun (rather than the modifying noun) in the construct state.

Possessive grammatical constructions, including the possessive case, may be regarded as subsets of the genitive construction. For example, the genitive construction "pack of dogs" is similar, but not identical in meaning to the possessive case "dogs' pack" (and neither of these is entirely interchangeable with "dog pack", which is neither genitive nor possessive). Modern English is an example of a language that has a possessive case rather than a conventional genitive case. That is, Modern English indicates a genitive construction with either the possessive clitic suffix "-'s", or a prepositional genitive construction such as "x of y". However, some irregular English pronouns do have possessive forms which may more commonly be described as genitive (see English possessive). The names of the astronomical constellations have genitive forms which are used in star names, for example the star Mintaka in the constellation Orion (genitive Orionis) is also known as Delta Orionis or 34 Orionis.

Many languages have a genitive case, including Albanian, Arabic, Armenian, Basque, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, Georgian, German, Greek, Gothic, Hungarian, Icelandic, Irish, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Romanian, Sanskrit, Scottish Gaelic, Swedish, Kannada, Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Turkish and all Slavic languages except Macedonian.

Functions edit

Depending on the language, specific varieties of genitive-noun–main-noun relationships may include:

  • possession (see possessive case, possessed case):
    • inalienable possession ("Janet's height", "Janet's existence", "Janet's long fingers")
    • alienable possession ("Janet's jacket", "Janet's drink")
    • relationship indicated by the noun being modified ("Janet's husband")
  • composition (see Partitive):
    • substance ("a wheel of cheese")
    • elements ("a group of men")
    • source ("a portion of the food")
  • participation in an action:
    • as an agent ("She benefited from her father's love") – this is called the subjective genitive (Compare "Her father loved her", where Her father is the subject.)
    • as a patient ("the love of music")  – this is called the objective genitive (Compare "She loves music", where music is the object.)
  • origin ("men of Rome")
  • reference ("the capital of the Republic" or "the Republic's capital")
  • description ("man of honour", "day of reckoning")
  • compounds ("doomsday" ("doom's day"), Scottish Gaelic "ball coise" = "football", where "coise" = gen. of "cas", "foot")
  • apposition (e.g. Japanese: ふじの山, romanizedFuji no Yama, lit.'the Mountain Fuji'[4][5])

Depending on the language, some of the relationships mentioned above have their own distinct cases different from the genitive.

Possessive pronouns are distinct pronouns, found in Indo-European languages such as English, that function like pronouns inflected in the genitive. They are considered separate pronouns if contrasting to languages where pronouns are regularly inflected in the genitive. For example, English my is either a separate possessive adjective or an irregular genitive of I, while in Finnish, for example, minun is regularly agglutinated from minu- "I" and -n (genitive).

In some languages, nouns in the genitive case also agree in case with the nouns they modify (that is, it is marked for two cases). This phenomenon is called suffixaufnahme.

In some languages, nouns in the genitive case may be found in inclusio – that is, between the main noun's article and the noun itself.

English edit

Old English had a genitive case, which has left its mark in modern English in the form of the possessive ending 's (now sometimes referred to as the "Saxon genitive"), as well as possessive adjective forms such as his, their, etc., and in certain words derived from adverbial genitives such as once and afterwards. (Other Old English case markers have generally disappeared completely.) The modern English possessive forms are not normally considered to represent a grammatical case, although they are sometimes referred to as genitives or as belonging to a possessive case. One of the reasons that the status of ’s as a case ending is often rejected is that it does not behave as such, but rather as a clitic marking that indicates that a dependency relationship exists between phrases. One can say the King's war, but also the King of France's war, where the genitive marker is attached to the full noun phrase the King of France, whereas case markers are normally attached to the head of a phrase. In languages having a true genitive case, such as Old English, this example may be expressed as þes cynges wyrre of France,[6] literally "the King's war of France", with the ’s attaching to the King.

Finnic genitives and accusatives edit

Finnic languages (Finnish, Estonian, etc.) have genitive cases.

In Finnish, prototypically the genitive is marked with -n, e.g. maa – maan "country – of the country". The stem may change, however, with consonant gradation and other reasons. For example, in certain words ending in consonants, -e- is added, e.g. mies – miehen "man – of the man", and in some, but not all words ending in -i, the -i is changed to an -e-, to give -en, e.g. lumi – lumen "snow – of the snow". The genitive is used extensively, with animate and inanimate possessors. In addition to the genitive, there is also a partitive case (marked -ta/-tä or -a/-ä) used for expressing that something is a part of a larger mass, e.g. joukko miehiä "a group of men".

In Estonian, the genitive marker -n has elided with respect to Finnish. Thus, the genitive always ends with a vowel, and the singular genitive is sometimes (in a subset of words ending with a vocal in nominative) identical in form to nominative.

In Finnish, in addition to the uses mentioned above, there is a construct where the genitive is used to mark a surname. For example, Juhani Virtanen can be also expressed Virtasen Juhani ("Juhani of the Virtanens").

A complication in Finnic languages is that the accusative case -(e)n is homophonic to the genitive case. This case does not indicate possession, but is a syntactic marker for the object, additionally indicating that the action is telic (completed). In Estonian, it is often said that only a "genitive" exists. However, the cases have completely different functions, and the form of the accusative has developed from *-(e)m. (The same sound change has developed into a synchronic mutation of a final m into n in Finnish, e.g. genitive sydämen vs. nominative sydän.) This homophony has exceptions in Finnish, where a separate accusative -(e)t is found in pronouns, e.g. kenet "who (telic object)", vs. kenen "whose".

A difference is also observed in some of the related Sámi languages, where the pronouns and the plural of nouns in the genitive and accusative are easily distinguishable from each other, e.g., kuä'cǩǩmi "eagles' (genitive plural)" and kuä'cǩǩmid "eagles (accusative plural)" in Skolt Sami.

German edit

Formation edit

Articles edit

The genitive singular definite article for masculine and neuter nouns is des, while the feminine and plural definite article is der. The indefinite articles are eines for masculine and neuter nouns, and einer for feminine and plural nouns (although the bare form cannot be used in the plural, it manifests in keiner, meiner, etc.)

Nouns edit

Singular masculine and neuter nouns of the strong declension in the genitive case are marked with -(e)s. Generally, one-syllable nouns favour the -es ending, and it is obligatory with nouns ending with a sibilant such as s or z. Otherwise, a simple -s ending is usual. Feminine and plural nouns remain uninflected:

  • des Beitrags (of the contribution) – masculine
  • der Blume (of the flower) – feminine
  • des Landes (of the country) – neuter
  • der Bäume (of the trees) – plural

Singular masculine nouns (and one neuter noun) of the weak declension are marked with an -(e)n (or rarely -(e)ns) ending in the genitive case:

  • des Raben (of the raven) – masculine
  • des Herzens (of the heart) – neuter

Adjectives edit

The declension of adjectives in the genitive case is as follows:

Masculine & Neuter Feminine & Plural
With article -en -en
With no article -er

Personal pronouns edit

The genitive personal pronouns are quite rare and either very formal, literary or outdated. They are as follows (with comparison to the nominative pronouns):

Nominative Genitive
ich (I) meiner
du (you sg.) deiner
er (he) seiner
es (it)
wir (we) unser
ihr (you pl.) euer
Sie (you formal sg./pl.) Ihrer
sie (she/they) ihrer

Some examples:

  • Würden Sie statt meiner gehen? (Would you go instead of me?)
  • Wir sind ihrer nicht würdig (We are not worthy of her/them)
  • Ich werde euer gedenken (I will commemorate you)

Relative pronouns edit

Unlike the personal ones, the genitive relative pronouns are in regular use and are as follows (with comparison to the nominative relative pronouns):

Nominative Genitive
Masculine der dessen
Neuter das
Feminine & Plural die deren

Some examples:

  • Kennst du den Schüler, dessen Mutter eine Hexe ist? (Do you know the student whose mother is a witch?) – masculine
  • Sie ist die Frau, deren Mann Rennfahrer ist (She is the woman whose husband is a racer) – feminine

Usage edit

Nouns edit

The genitive case is often used to show possession or the relation between nouns:

  • die Farbe des Himmels (the colour of the sky)
  • Deutschland liegt im Herzen Europas (Germany lies in the heart of Europe)
  • der Tod seiner Frau (the death of his wife)
  • die Entwicklung dieser Länder (the development of these countries)

A simple s is added to the end of a name:

  • Claudias Buch (Claudia's book)

Prepositions edit

The genitive case is also commonly found after certain prepositions:

  • innerhalb eines Tages (within a day)
  • statt des Hemdes (instead of the shirt)
  • während unserer Abwesenheit (during our absence)
  • jenseits der Berge (beyond the mountains)

Adjectives edit

The genitive case can sometimes be found in connection with certain adjectives:

  • Wir sind uns dessen bewusst (We are aware of that)
  • Er ist des Diebstahls schuldig (He is guilty of theft)
  • Das Kind ist der Ruhe bedürftig (The child is in need of calmness)
  • Ich werde dieses Lebens überdrüssig (I am growing weary of this life)

Verbs edit

The genitive case is occasionally found in connection with certain verbs (some of which require an accusative before the genitive); they are mostly either formal or legal:

  • Die Stadt erfreut sich eines günstigen Klimas (The city enjoys a favourable climate)
  • Gedenken Sie der Toten des Krieges (Remember those who died in (the) war)
  • Wer klagte ihn des Mordes an? (Who accused him of murder?)
  • Man verdächtigt euch des Betrugs (Someone suspects you of (committing) fraud)

Greek edit

The ablative case of Indo-European was absorbed into the genitive in Classical Greek.[7] This added to the usages of the "genitive proper", the usages of the "ablatival genitive". The genitive occurs with verbs, adjectives, adverbs and prepositions. See also Genitive absolute.

Hungarian edit

The Hungarian genitive is constructed using the suffix .

  • madár ('bird'); madáré ('bird's')

The genitive suffix is only used with the predicate of a sentence: it serves the role of mine, yours, hers, etc. The possessed object is left in the nominative case. For example:

  • A csőr a madáré ('The beak is the bird's').

If the possessor is not the predicate of the sentence, the genitive is not used. Instead, the possessive suffixes (-(j)e or -(j)a in the third person singular, depending on vowel harmony) mark the possessed object. The possessor is left in the nominative if it directly precedes the possessed object (otherwise it takes a dative -nak/-nek suffix). For example:

  • csőr ('beak'); csőre ('its beak')
  • a madár csőre/csőre a madárnak ('the bird's beak')

In addition, the suffix -i ('of') is also used. For example:

  • madár ('bird'); madári ('avian', 'of bird(s)')

Japanese edit

The Japanese possessive is constructed by using the grammatical particle no の to make the genitive case.[8] For example:

Nominative: 猫 neko ('cat'); 手 te ('hand, paw')
Genitive: 猫の手 neko-no te ('cat's paw')

It also uses the suffix -na 〜な for adjectival noun; in some analyses[citation needed] adjectival nouns are simply nouns that take -na in the genitive, forming a complementary distribution (-no and -na being allomorphs).

The archaic genitive case particle -ga ~が is still retained in certain expressions, place names, and dialects. Possessive ga can also be written as a small ke (), for example in Kasumigaoka (霞ヶ丘).[9]

Typically, languages have nominative case nouns converting into genitive case. It has been found, however, that the Kansai dialect of Japanese will in rare cases allow accusative case to convert to genitive, if specific conditions are met in the clause in which the conversion appears. This is referred to as "Accusative-Genitive conversion."[10]

Latin edit

The genitive is one of the cases of nouns and pronouns in Latin. Latin genitives still have certain modern scientific uses:

  • Scientific names of living things sometimes contain genitives, as in the plant name Buddleja davidii, meaning "David's buddleia". Here davidii is the genitive of Davidius, a Latinized version of the Hebrew name. It is not capitalized because it is the second part of a binomial name.
  • Names of astronomical constellations are Latin, and the genitives of their names are used in naming objects in those constellations, as in the Bayer designation of stars. For example, the brightest star in the constellation Virgo is called Alpha Virginis, which is to say "Alpha of Virgo", as virginis is the genitive of virgō. Plural forms and adjectives also decline accordingly: plural Alpha Piscium (Pisces) and Alpha Canum Venaticorum (Canes Venatici) versus singular Alpha Piscis Austrini (Piscis Austrinus) and Alpha Canis Majoris (Canis Major). Astronomy manuals often list the genitive forms, as some are easy to get wrong even with a basic knowledge of Latin, e.g. Vela, which is a neuter plural not a feminine singular: Delta Velorum not *Delta Velae.
  • Modus operandi, which can be translated to English as "mode of operation", in which operandi is a singular genitive gerund (i.e. "of operation"), not a plural of operandus as is sometimes mistakenly assumed.

Irish edit

The Irish language also uses a genitive case (tuiseal ginideach). For example, in the phrase bean an tí (woman of the house), is the genitive case of teach, meaning "house". Another example is barr an chnoic, "top of the hill", where cnoc means "hill", but is changed to chnoic, which also incorporates lenition.

Mandarin edit

In Mandarin Chinese, the genitive case is made by use of the particle 的 (de).[11]

de

māo

[我的貓]

 

de māo

my cat

However, about persons in relation to oneself, 的 is often dropped when the context allows for it to be easily understood.

de

妈妈

māmā

 

妈妈

māmā

[我媽媽]

 

妈妈 → 我 妈妈

de māmā {} wǒ māmā

both mean "my mother"

Persian edit

Old Persian had a true genitive case inherited from Proto-Indo-European. By the time of Middle Persian, the genitive case had been lost and replaced by an analytical construction which is now called Ezāfe. This construction was inherited by New Persian, and was also later borrowed into numerous other Iranic, Turkic and Indo-Aryan languages of Western and South Asia.

Semitic languages edit

Genitive case marking existed in Proto-Semitic, Akkadian, and Ugaritic. It indicated possession, and it is preserved today only in Arabic.

Akkadian edit

Nominative: šarrum (king)
Genitive: aššat šarrim (wife of king = king's wife)

Arabic edit

Called المجرور al-majrūr (meaning "dragged") in Arabic, the genitive case functions both as an indication of ownership (ex. the door of the house) and for nouns following a preposition.

Nominative: ٌبيت baytun (a house)
Genitive: ٍبابُ بيت bābu baytin (door of a house) ِبابُ البيت bābu l-bayti (door of the house)

The Arabic genitive marking also appears after prepositions.

e.g. ٍبابٌ لبيت bābun li-baytin (a door for a house)

The Semitic genitive should not be confused with the pronominal possessive suffixes that exist in all the Semitic languages

e.g. Arabic بيتي bayt-ī (my house) َكتابُك kitābu-ka (your [masc.] book).

Slavic languages edit

With the exception of Bulgarian and Macedonian, all Slavic languages decline the nouns and adjectives in accordance with the genitive case using a variety of endings depending on the word's lexical category, its gender, number (singular or plural) and in some cases meaning. For instance, in Russian Broutona (lit. Broughton's) island name, its genitive/possessive case is created by adding a affix to the explorer's name.

Possessives edit

To indicate possession the ending of the noun indicating the possessor changes depending on the word's ending in the nominative case. For example, to a, u, i, or y in Polish, а, я, ы, or и in Russian, а, я, y, ю, і, и or ей in Ukrainian, and similar cases in other Slavic languages.

Nominative: (pol.) "Oto Anton" / (rus.) "Вот Антон" / (ukr.) "Ось Антон" ("Here is Anton").
Genitive: (pol.) "Oto obiad Antonа" / (rus.) "Вот обед Антона" / (ukr.) "Ось oбід Антона" ("Here is Anton's lunch").

Possessives can also be formed by the construction (pol.) "u [subject] jest [object]" / (rus.) "У [subject] есть [object]"/ (ukr.) "у(в) [subject] є [object]"

Nominative: (pol.) "Oto Anton" / (rus.) "Вот Антон" / (ukr.) "Ось Антон" ("Here is Anton").
Genitive: (pol.) "u Antonа jest obiad / (rus.) "У Антона есть обед" / (ukr.) "У(В) Антона є обід" ("Anton has a lunch", literally: "(There) is a lunch at Anton's").

In sentences where the possessor includes an associated pronoun, the pronoun also changes:

Nominative: (pol.) Oto mój brat / (rus.) "Вот мой брат"/ (ukr.) "От мій брат" ("Here is my brother").
Genitive: (pol.) "u mojego bratа jest obiad / (rus.) "У моего брата есть обед" / (ukr.) "У мого брата є обід" ("My brother has a lunch", literally: "(There) is a lunch at my_brother's").

And in sentences denoting negative possession, the ending of the object noun also changes:

Nominative: (pol.) "Oto Irena" / (rus.) "Вот Ирена" / (ukr.) "От Ірена" ("Here is Irene").
Genitive: (pol.) "Irena nie ma obiadu ("Irene does not have a lunch") or (pol.) "u Ireny nie ma obiadu ("(There) is no lunch at Irene's")

The Polish phrase "nie ma [object]" can work both as a negation of having [object] or a negation of an existence of [object], but the meaning of the two sentences and its structure is different. (In the first case [subject] is Irene, and in the second case [subject] is virtual, it is "the space" at Irene's place, not Irene herself)

Genitive: (rus.) "У Ирены нет обеда" ("Irene does not have a lunch", literally: "(There) is no lunch at Irene's").

The Russian word "нет" is a contraction of "не" + "есть". In Russian there is no distinction between [subject] not having an [object] and [object] not being present at [subject]'s.

Genitive: (ukr.) "Ірена не має обіду ("Irene does not have a lunch") or (ukr.) "y Ірени нема(є) обіду ("At Irene's does not have a lunch")

Note the difference between the spelling "не має [object]" and "нема(є) [object]" in both cases.

To express negation edit

The genitive case is also used in sentences expressing negation, even when no possessive relationship is involved. The ending of the subject noun changes just as it does in possessive sentences. The genitive, in this sense, can only be used to negate nominative, accusative and genitive sentences, and not other cases.

Nominative: (pol.) "(Czy) Maria jest w domu?" / (rus.) "Мария дома?" / (Чи) Марія (є) вдома? ("Is Maria at home?").
Genitive: (pol.) "Marii nie ma w domu" ("Maria is not at home", literally: "[virtual subject] has no Maria at home")
Genitive: (rus.) "Марии нет дома" ("Maria is not at home", literally: "Of Maria there is none at home.").
Genitive: (ukr.) "Марії нема(є) вдома" ("Maria is not at home", literally: "[virtual subject] has no Maria at home.")
Accusative: (pol.) "Mogę rozczytać twoje pismo" / (rus.) Могу (про)читать твой почерк / (ukr.) Можу (про)читати твій почерк ("I can read your handwriting")
Genitive: (pol.) "Nie mogę rozczytać twojego pisma" / (rus.) "Не могу (про)читать твоего почерка" / (ukr.) "Не можу (про)читати твого почерку" ("I can't read your handwriting")

Use of genitive for negation is obligatory in Slovene, Polish and Old Church Slavonic. Some East Slavic languages ( e.g. Russian and Belarusian) employ either the accusative or genitive for negation, although the genitive is more commonly used. In Czech, Slovak and Serbo-Croatian, negating with the genitive case is perceived as rather archaic and the accusative is preferred, but genitive negation in these languages is still not uncommon, especially in music and literature.[12]

Partial direct object edit

The genitive case is used with some verbs and mass nouns to indicate that the action covers only a part of the direct object (having a function of non-existing partitive case), whereas similar constructions using the Accusative case denote full coverage. Compare the sentences:

Genitive: (pol.) "Napiłem się wody" / (rus.) "Я напился воды" / (ukr.) "Я напився води" ("I drank water," i.e. "I drank some water, part of the water available")
Accusative: (pol.) "Wypiłem wodę" / (rus.) "Я выпил воду / (ukr.) "Я випив воду ("I drank the water," i.e. "I drank all the water, all the water in question")

In Russian, special partitive case or sub-case is observed for some uncountable nouns which in some contexts have preferred alternative form on -у/ю instead of standard genitive on -а/я: выпил чаю ('drank some tea'), but сорта чая ('sorts of tea').

Prepositional constructions edit

The genitive case is also used in many prepositional constructions. (Usually when some movement or change of state is involved, and when describing the source / destination of the movement. Sometimes also when describing the manner of acting.)

  • Czech prepositions using genitive case: od (from), z, ze (from), do (into), bez (without), kromě (excepting), místo (instead of), podle (after, according to), podél (along), okolo (around), u (near, by), vedle (beside), během (during), pomocí (using, by the help of), stran (as regards) etc.
  • Polish prepositions using genitive case: od (from), z, ze (from), do, w (into), na (onto), bez (without), zamiast (instead of), wedle (after, according to), wzdłuż (along), około (around), u (near, by), koło (beside), podczas (during), etc.
  • Russian prepositions using genitive case: от (from), с, со (from), до (before, up to), без (without), кроме (excepting), вместо (instead of), после (after), вдоль (along), около (around), у (near, by), во время (during), насчёт (regarding), etc.

Turkish edit

The Turkish genitive, formed with a genitive suffix for the possessor, is used in combination with a possessive for the possessed entity, formed with a possessive suffix. For example, in "my mother's mother", the possessor is "my mother", and the possessed entity is "[her] mother". In Turkish:

Nominative: anne ("mother");
First-person possessive: annem ("my mother");
Third-person possessive: annesi ("[someone]'s mother");
Genitive of annem: annemin ("my mother's");
Genitive and possessive combined: annemin annesi ("my mother's mother", i.e., "my maternal grandmother").

Albanian edit

The genitive in Albanian is formed with the help of clitics. For example:

Nominative: libër ('book'); vajzë ('girl');
Genitive: libri i vajzës (the girl's book)

If the possessed object is masculine, the clitic is i. If the possessed object is feminine, the clitic is e. If the possessed object is plural, the clitic is e regardless of the gender.

The genitive is used with some prepositions: me anë ('by means of'), nga ana ('on behalf of', 'from the side of'), për arsye ('due to'), për shkak ('because of'), me përjashtim ('with the exception of'), në vend ('instead of').

Armenian edit

The genitive in Armenian is generally formed by adding "-ի":

Nominative: աղջիկ ('girl'); գիրք ('book');

Genitive: աղջիկի գիրքը ("the girl's book").

However, there are certain words that are not formed this way. For example, words with ուն change to ան:

Nominative: տուն ('house'), Genitive: տան ("house's").

Dravidian languages edit

Kannada edit

In Kannada, the genitive case-endings are:

for masculine or feminine nouns ending in "ಅ" (a): ನ (na)

  • Examples: sūrya-na ('of the sun')

for neuter nouns ending in "ಅ" (a): ದ (da)

  • Examples: mara-da ('of the tree')

for all nouns ending in "ಇ" (i), "ಈ" (ī), "ಎ" (e), or "ಏ" (ē): ಅ (a)

  • Examples: mane-y-a ('of the house'; a linking "y" is added between the stem and the suffix)

for all nouns ending in "ಉ" (u), "ಊ" (ū), "ಋ" (r̥), or "ೠ" (r̥̄): ಇನ (ina)

  • Examples; guru-v-ina ('of the teacher'; a linking "v" is added between the stem and the suffix)

Most postpositions in Kannada take the genitive case.

Tamil edit

In Tamil, the genitive case ending is the word உடைய or இன், which signifies possession. Depending on the last letter of the noun, the genitive case endings may vary.

If the last letter is a consonant (மெய் எழுத்து), like க், ங், ச், ஞ், ட், ண், த், ந், ப், ம், ய், ர், ல், வ், ழ், then the suffix உடைய/இன் gets added. *Examples: His: அவன் + உடைய = அவனுடைய, Doctor's: மருத்துவர் + உடைய = மருத்துவருடைய, மருத்துவர் + இன் = மருத்துவரின் Kumar's: குமார் + உடைய = குமாருடைய, குமார்+ இன் = குமாரின்

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Edzard, Dietz Otto (2003). Sumerian Grammar. BRILL. p. 36. ISBN 978-90-474-0340-1.
  2. ^ Glossing Rules. Department of Linguistics. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Leipzig.
  3. ^ Dictionary.com, genitive
  4. ^ "Noun-related Particles | Learn Japanese". www.guidetojapanese.org. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  5. ^ A dictionary of basic Japanese Grammar. The Japan Times. 1986. p. 312. ISBN 4-7890-0454-6.
  6. ^ Benjamin Thorpe, ed. (1861). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. Rerum Britannicarum Medii Aevi Scriptores. Vol. 23. Longman and Co. p. 372.
  7. ^ Herbert Weir Smyth (1956). Greek Grammar. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press., page 313 and elsewhere
  8. ^ Vance, Timothy J. (April 1993). "Are Japanese Particles Clitics?". Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese. 27 (1): 10. doi:10.2307/489122. JSTOR 489122.
  9. ^ "What is the small katakana ke in 霞ヶ丘 and 一ヶ月?". sci.lang.japan.
  10. ^ Shin'ya, Asano; Hiroyuki Una (February 2010). "Mood and Case: with special reference to genitive Case conversion in Kansai Japanese". Journal of East Asian Linguistics. 19 (1): 37–59. doi:10.1007/s10831-009-9055-y. S2CID 123519063.
  11. ^ Yang, Yong (2014). "Generalized Case Theory and the Argument-Omission Structure in Mandarin Chinese". Chinese Lexical Semantics. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 8922. pp. 441–447. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-14331-6_44. ISBN 978-3-319-14330-9.
  12. ^ Olga Kagan (2007). "Property-Denoting NPs and Non-Canonical Genitive Case" (PDF). Proceedings of the 17th Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference. CLC Publications, Cornell University. (PDF) from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved January 27, 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Karlsson, Fred (2018). Finnish - A Comprehensive Grammar. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-82104-0.
  • Anhava, Jaakko (2015). "Criteria For Case Forms in Finnish and Hungarian Grammars". journal.fi. Helsinki: Finnish Scholarly Journals Online.

External links edit

  • German genitive case A lesson covering the genitive case in the German language
  • Russian genitive: , [2],
  • Genitive Case In Arabic

genitive, case, genitive, redirects, here, broader, category, genitive, construction, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remove. Genitive redirects here For broader category see Genitive construction This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Genitive case news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In grammar the genitive case abbreviated gen 2 is the grammatical case that marks a word usually a noun as modifying another word also usually a noun thus indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun 3 A genitive can also serve purposes indicating other relationships For example some verbs may feature arguments in the genitive case and the genitive case may also have adverbial uses see adverbial genitive Cuneiform inscription Lugal Kiengi Kiuri 𒈗𒆠𒂗𒄀𒆠𒌵 King of Sumer and Akkad on a seal of Sumerian king Shulgi r c 2094 2047 BCE The final ke4 𒆤 is the composite of k genitive case and e ergative case 1 The genitive construction includes the genitive case but is a broader category Placing a modifying noun in the genitive case is one way of indicating that it is related to a head noun in a genitive construction However there are other ways to indicate a genitive construction For example many Afroasiatic languages place the head noun rather than the modifying noun in the construct state Possessive grammatical constructions including the possessive case may be regarded as subsets of the genitive construction For example the genitive construction pack of dogs is similar but not identical in meaning to the possessive case dogs pack and neither of these is entirely interchangeable with dog pack which is neither genitive nor possessive Modern English is an example of a language that has a possessive case rather than a conventional genitive case That is Modern English indicates a genitive construction with either the possessive clitic suffix s or a prepositional genitive construction such as x of y However some irregular English pronouns do have possessive forms which may more commonly be described as genitive see English possessive The names of the astronomical constellations have genitive forms which are used in star names for example the star Mintaka in the constellation Orion genitive Orionis is also known as Delta Orionis or 34 Orionis Many languages have a genitive case including Albanian Arabic Armenian Basque Danish Dutch Estonian Finnish Georgian German Greek Gothic Hungarian Icelandic Irish Latin Latvian Lithuanian Romanian Sanskrit Scottish Gaelic Swedish Kannada Tamil Malayalam Telugu Turkish and all Slavic languages except Macedonian Contents 1 Functions 2 English 3 Finnic genitives and accusatives 4 German 4 1 Formation 4 1 1 Articles 4 1 2 Nouns 4 1 3 Adjectives 4 1 4 Personal pronouns 4 1 5 Relative pronouns 4 2 Usage 4 2 1 Nouns 4 2 2 Prepositions 4 2 3 Adjectives 4 2 4 Verbs 5 Greek 6 Hungarian 7 Japanese 8 Latin 9 Irish 10 Mandarin 11 Persian 12 Semitic languages 12 1 Akkadian 12 2 Arabic 13 Slavic languages 13 1 Possessives 13 2 To express negation 13 3 Partial direct object 13 4 Prepositional constructions 14 Turkish 15 Albanian 16 Armenian 17 Dravidian languages 17 1 Kannada 17 2 Tamil 18 See also 19 References 20 Further reading 21 External linksFunctions editDepending on the language specific varieties of genitive noun main noun relationships may include possession see possessive case possessed case inalienable possession Janet s height Janet s existence Janet s long fingers alienable possession Janet s jacket Janet s drink relationship indicated by the noun being modified Janet s husband composition see Partitive substance a wheel of cheese elements a group of men source a portion of the food participation in an action as an agent She benefited from her father s love this is called the subjective genitive Compare Her father loved her where Her father is the subject as a patient the love of music this is called the objective genitive Compare She loves music where music is the object origin men of Rome reference the capital of the Republic or the Republic s capital description man of honour day of reckoning compounds doomsday doom s day Scottish Gaelic ball coise football where coise gen of cas foot apposition e g Japanese ふじの山 romanized Fuji no Yama lit the Mountain Fuji 4 5 Depending on the language some of the relationships mentioned above have their own distinct cases different from the genitive Possessive pronouns are distinct pronouns found in Indo European languages such as English that function like pronouns inflected in the genitive They are considered separate pronouns if contrasting to languages where pronouns are regularly inflected in the genitive For example English my is either a separate possessive adjective or an irregular genitive of I while in Finnish for example minun is regularly agglutinated from minu I and n genitive In some languages nouns in the genitive case also agree in case with the nouns they modify that is it is marked for two cases This phenomenon is called suffixaufnahme In some languages nouns in the genitive case may be found in inclusio that is between the main noun s article and the noun itself English editFurther information English possessive Old English had a genitive case which has left its mark in modern English in the form of the possessive ending s now sometimes referred to as the Saxon genitive as well as possessive adjective forms such as his their etc and in certain words derived from adverbial genitives such as once and afterwards Other Old English case markers have generally disappeared completely The modern English possessive forms are not normally considered to represent a grammatical case although they are sometimes referred to as genitives or as belonging to a possessive case One of the reasons that the status of s as a case ending is often rejected is that it does not behave as such but rather as a clitic marking that indicates that a dependency relationship exists between phrases One can say the King s war but also the King of France s war where the genitive marker is attached to the full noun phrase the King of France whereas case markers are normally attached to the head of a phrase In languages having a true genitive case such as Old English this example may be expressed as thes cynges wyrre of France 6 literally the King s war of France with the s attaching to the King Finnic genitives and accusatives editFinnic languages Finnish Estonian etc have genitive cases In Finnish prototypically the genitive is marked with n e g maa maan country of the country The stem may change however with consonant gradation and other reasons For example in certain words ending in consonants e is added e g mies miehen man of the man and in some but not all words ending in i the i is changed to an e to give en e g lumi lumen snow of the snow The genitive is used extensively with animate and inanimate possessors In addition to the genitive there is also a partitive case marked ta ta or a a used for expressing that something is a part of a larger mass e g joukko miehia a group of men In Estonian the genitive marker n has elided with respect to Finnish Thus the genitive always ends with a vowel and the singular genitive is sometimes in a subset of words ending with a vocal in nominative identical in form to nominative In Finnish in addition to the uses mentioned above there is a construct where the genitive is used to mark a surname For example Juhani Virtanen can be also expressed Virtasen Juhani Juhani of the Virtanens A complication in Finnic languages is that the accusative case e n is homophonic to the genitive case This case does not indicate possession but is a syntactic marker for the object additionally indicating that the action is telic completed In Estonian it is often said that only a genitive exists However the cases have completely different functions and the form of the accusative has developed from e m The same sound change has developed into a synchronic mutation of a final m into n in Finnish e g genitive sydamen vs nominative sydan This homophony has exceptions in Finnish where a separate accusative e t is found in pronouns e g kenet who telic object vs kenen whose A difference is also observed in some of the related Sami languages where the pronouns and the plural of nouns in the genitive and accusative are easily distinguishable from each other e g kua cǩǩmi eagles genitive plural and kua cǩǩmid eagles accusative plural in Skolt Sami German editFormation edit Articles edit The genitive singular definite article for masculine and neuter nouns is des while the feminine and plural definite article is der The indefinite articles are eines for masculine and neuter nouns and einer for feminine and plural nouns although the bare form cannot be used in the plural it manifests in keiner meiner etc Nouns edit Singular masculine and neuter nouns of the strong declension in the genitive case are marked with e s Generally one syllable nouns favour the es ending and it is obligatory with nouns ending with a sibilant such as s or z Otherwise a simple s ending is usual Feminine and plural nouns remain uninflected des Beitrags of the contribution masculine der Blume of the flower feminine des Landes of the country neuter der Baume of the trees pluralSingular masculine nouns and one neuter noun of the weak declension are marked with an e n or rarely e ns ending in the genitive case des Raben of the raven masculine des Herzens of the heart neuterAdjectives edit The declension of adjectives in the genitive case is as follows Masculine amp Neuter Feminine amp PluralWith article en enWith no article erPersonal pronouns edit The genitive personal pronouns are quite rare and either very formal literary or outdated They are as follows with comparison to the nominative pronouns Nominative Genitiveich I meinerdu you sg deinerer he seineres it wir we unserihr you pl euerSie you formal sg pl Ihrersie she they ihrerSome examples Wurden Sie statt meiner gehen Would you go instead of me Wir sind ihrer nicht wurdig We are not worthy of her them Ich werde euer gedenken I will commemorate you Relative pronouns edit Unlike the personal ones the genitive relative pronouns are in regular use and are as follows with comparison to the nominative relative pronouns Nominative GenitiveMasculine der dessenNeuter dasFeminine amp Plural die derenSome examples Kennst du den Schuler dessen Mutter eine Hexe ist Do you know the student whose mother is a witch masculine Sie ist die Frau deren Mann Rennfahrer ist She is the woman whose husband is a racer feminineUsage edit Nouns edit The genitive case is often used to show possession or the relation between nouns die Farbe des Himmels the colour of the sky Deutschland liegt im Herzen Europas Germany lies in the heart of Europe der Tod seiner Frau the death of his wife die Entwicklung dieser Lander the development of these countries A simple s is added to the end of a name Claudias Buch Claudia s book Prepositions edit The genitive case is also commonly found after certain prepositions innerhalb eines Tages within a day statt des Hemdes instead of the shirt wahrend unserer Abwesenheit during our absence jenseits der Berge beyond the mountains Adjectives edit The genitive case can sometimes be found in connection with certain adjectives Wir sind uns dessen bewusst We are aware of that Er ist des Diebstahls schuldig He is guilty of theft Das Kind ist der Ruhe bedurftig The child is in need of calmness Ich werde dieses Lebens uberdrussig I am growing weary of this life Verbs edit The genitive case is occasionally found in connection with certain verbs some of which require an accusative before the genitive they are mostly either formal or legal Die Stadt erfreut sich eines gunstigen Klimas The city enjoys a favourable climate Gedenken Sie der Toten des Krieges Remember those who died in the war Wer klagte ihn des Mordes an Who accused him of murder Man verdachtigt euch des Betrugs Someone suspects you of committing fraud Greek editThe ablative case of Indo European was absorbed into the genitive in Classical Greek 7 This added to the usages of the genitive proper the usages of the ablatival genitive The genitive occurs with verbs adjectives adverbs and prepositions See also Genitive absolute Hungarian editThe Hungarian genitive is constructed using the suffix e madar bird madare bird s The genitive e suffix is only used with the predicate of a sentence it serves the role of mine yours hers etc The possessed object is left in the nominative case For example A csor a madare The beak is the bird s If the possessor is not the predicate of the sentence the genitive is not used Instead the possessive suffixes j e or j a in the third person singular depending on vowel harmony mark the possessed object The possessor is left in the nominative if it directly precedes the possessed object otherwise it takes a dative nak nek suffix For example csor beak csore its beak a madar csore csore a madarnak the bird s beak In addition the suffix i of is also used For example madar bird madari avian of bird s Japanese editThe Japanese possessive is constructed by using the grammatical particle no の to make the genitive case 8 For example Nominative 猫 neko cat 手 te hand paw Genitive 猫の手 neko no te cat s paw It also uses the suffix na な for adjectival noun in some analyses citation needed adjectival nouns are simply nouns that take na in the genitive forming a complementary distribution no and na being allomorphs The archaic genitive case particle ga が is still retained in certain expressions place names and dialects Possessive ga can also be written as a small ke ヶ for example in Kasumigaoka 霞ヶ丘 9 Typically languages have nominative case nouns converting into genitive case It has been found however that the Kansai dialect of Japanese will in rare cases allow accusative case to convert to genitive if specific conditions are met in the clause in which the conversion appears This is referred to as Accusative Genitive conversion 10 Latin editThe genitive is one of the cases of nouns and pronouns in Latin Latin genitives still have certain modern scientific uses Scientific names of living things sometimes contain genitives as in the plant name Buddleja davidii meaning David s buddleia Here davidii is the genitive of Davidius a Latinized version of the Hebrew name It is not capitalized because it is the second part of a binomial name Names of astronomical constellations are Latin and the genitives of their names are used in naming objects in those constellations as in the Bayer designation of stars For example the brightest star in the constellation Virgo is called Alpha Virginis which is to say Alpha of Virgo as virginis is the genitive of virgō Plural forms and adjectives also decline accordingly plural Alpha Piscium Pisces and Alpha Canum Venaticorum Canes Venatici versus singular Alpha Piscis Austrini Piscis Austrinus and Alpha Canis Majoris Canis Major Astronomy manuals often list the genitive forms as some are easy to get wrong even with a basic knowledge of Latin e g Vela which is a neuter plural not a feminine singular Delta Velorum not Delta Velae Modus operandi which can be translated to English as mode of operation in which operandi is a singular genitive gerund i e of operation not a plural of operandus as is sometimes mistakenly assumed Irish editThis section may have misleading content Please help clarify the content October 2013 The Irish language also uses a genitive case tuiseal ginideach For example in the phrase bean an ti woman of the house ti is the genitive case of teach meaning house Another example is barr an chnoic top of the hill where cnoc means hill but is changed to chnoic which also incorporates lenition Mandarin editIn Mandarin Chinese the genitive case is made by use of the particle 的 de 11 我wǒ的de猫mao 我的貓 我 的 猫wǒ de maomy cat However about persons in relation to oneself 的 is often dropped when the context allows for it to be easily understood 我wǒ的de妈妈mama 我wǒ妈妈mama 我媽媽 我 的 妈妈 我 妈妈wǒ de mama wǒ mamaboth mean my mother Persian editMain article Ezafe Old Persian had a true genitive case inherited from Proto Indo European By the time of Middle Persian the genitive case had been lost and replaced by an analytical construction which is now called Ezafe This construction was inherited by New Persian and was also later borrowed into numerous other Iranic Turkic and Indo Aryan languages of Western and South Asia Semitic languages editGenitive case marking existed in Proto Semitic Akkadian and Ugaritic It indicated possession and it is preserved today only in Arabic Akkadian edit Nominative sarrum king Genitive assat sarrim wife of king king s wife Arabic edit Called المجرور al majrur meaning dragged in Arabic the genitive case functions both as an indication of ownership ex the door of the house and for nouns following a preposition Nominative بيت baytun a house Genitive باب بيت babu baytin door of a house باب البيت babu l bayti door of the house The Arabic genitive marking also appears after prepositions e g باب لبيت babun li baytin a door for a house The Semitic genitive should not be confused with the pronominal possessive suffixes that exist in all the Semitic languages e g Arabic بيتي bayt i my house كتاب ك kitabu ka your masc book Slavic languages editWith the exception of Bulgarian and Macedonian all Slavic languages decline the nouns and adjectives in accordance with the genitive case using a variety of endings depending on the word s lexical category its gender number singular or plural and in some cases meaning For instance in Russian Broutona lit Broughton s island name its genitive possessive case is created by adding a affix to the explorer s name Possessives edit To indicate possession the ending of the noun indicating the possessor changes depending on the word s ending in the nominative case For example to a u i or y in Polish a ya y or i in Russian a ya y yu i i or ej in Ukrainian and similar cases in other Slavic languages Nominative pol Oto Anton rus Vot Anton ukr Os Anton Here is Anton Genitive pol Oto obiad Antona rus Vot obed Antona ukr Os obid Antona Here is Anton s lunch Possessives can also be formed by the construction pol u subject jest object rus U subject est object ukr u v subject ye object Nominative pol Oto Anton rus Vot Anton ukr Os Anton Here is Anton Genitive pol u Antona jest obiad rus U Antona est obed ukr U V Antona ye obid Anton has a lunch literally There is a lunch at Anton s In sentences where the possessor includes an associated pronoun the pronoun also changes Nominative pol Oto moj brat rus Vot moj brat ukr Ot mij brat Here is my brother Genitive pol u mojego brata jest obiad rus U moego brata est obed ukr U mogo brata ye obid My brother has a lunch literally There is a lunch at my brother s And in sentences denoting negative possession the ending of the object noun also changes Nominative pol Oto Irena rus Vot Irena ukr Ot Irena Here is Irene Genitive pol Irena nie ma obiadu Irene does not have a lunch or pol u Ireny nie ma obiadu There is no lunch at Irene s The Polish phrase nie ma object can work both as a negation of having object or a negation of an existence of object but the meaning of the two sentences and its structure is different In the first case subject is Irene and in the second case subject is virtual it is the space at Irene s place not Irene herself Genitive rus U Ireny net obeda Irene does not have a lunch literally There is no lunch at Irene s The Russian word net is a contraction of ne est In Russian there is no distinction between subject not having an object and object not being present at subject s Genitive ukr Irena ne maye obidu Irene does not have a lunch or ukr y Ireni nema ye obidu At Irene s does not have a lunch Note the difference between the spelling ne maye object and nema ye object in both cases To express negation edit The genitive case is also used in sentences expressing negation even when no possessive relationship is involved The ending of the subject noun changes just as it does in possessive sentences The genitive in this sense can only be used to negate nominative accusative and genitive sentences and not other cases Nominative pol Czy Maria jest w domu rus Mariya doma Chi Mariya ye vdoma Is Maria at home Genitive pol Marii nie ma w domu Maria is not at home literally virtual subject has no Maria at home Genitive rus Marii net doma Maria is not at home literally Of Maria there is none at home Genitive ukr Mariyi nema ye vdoma Maria is not at home literally virtual subject has no Maria at home Accusative pol Moge rozczytac twoje pismo rus Mogu pro chitat tvoj pocherk ukr Mozhu pro chitati tvij pocherk I can read your handwriting Genitive pol Nie moge rozczytac twojego pisma rus Ne mogu pro chitat tvoego pocherka ukr Ne mozhu pro chitati tvogo pocherku I can t read your handwriting Use of genitive for negation is obligatory in Slovene Polish and Old Church Slavonic Some East Slavic languages e g Russian and Belarusian employ either the accusative or genitive for negation although the genitive is more commonly used In Czech Slovak and Serbo Croatian negating with the genitive case is perceived as rather archaic and the accusative is preferred but genitive negation in these languages is still not uncommon especially in music and literature 12 Partial direct object edit The genitive case is used with some verbs and mass nouns to indicate that the action covers only a part of the direct object having a function of non existing partitive case whereas similar constructions using the Accusative case denote full coverage Compare the sentences Genitive pol Napilem sie wody rus Ya napilsya vody ukr Ya napivsya vodi I drank water i e I drank some water part of the water available Accusative pol Wypilem wode rus Ya vypil vodu ukr Ya vipiv vodu I drank the water i e I drank all the water all the water in question In Russian special partitive case or sub case is observed for some uncountable nouns which in some contexts have preferred alternative form on u yu instead of standard genitive on a ya vypil chayu drank some tea but sorta chaya sorts of tea Prepositional constructions edit The genitive case is also used in many prepositional constructions Usually when some movement or change of state is involved and when describing the source destination of the movement Sometimes also when describing the manner of acting Czech prepositions using genitive case od from z ze from do into bez without krome excepting misto instead of podle after according to podel along okolo around u near by vedle beside behem during pomoci using by the help of stran as regards etc Polish prepositions using genitive case od from z ze from do w into na onto bez without zamiast instead of wedle after according to wzdluz along okolo around u near by kolo beside podczas during etc Russian prepositions using genitive case ot from s so from do before up to bez without krome excepting vmesto instead of posle after vdol along okolo around u near by vo vremya during naschyot regarding etc Turkish editThe Turkish genitive formed with a genitive suffix for the possessor is used in combination with a possessive for the possessed entity formed with a possessive suffix For example in my mother s mother the possessor is my mother and the possessed entity is her mother In Turkish Nominative anne mother First person possessive annem my mother Third person possessive annesi someone s mother Genitive of annem annemin my mother s Genitive and possessive combined annemin annesi my mother s mother i e my maternal grandmother Albanian editThe genitive in Albanian is formed with the help of clitics For example Nominative liber book vajze girl Genitive libri i vajzes the girl s book If the possessed object is masculine the clitic is i If the possessed object is feminine the clitic is e If the possessed object is plural the clitic is e regardless of the gender The genitive is used with some prepositions me ane by means of nga ana on behalf of from the side of per arsye due to per shkak because of me perjashtim with the exception of ne vend instead of Armenian editThe genitive in Armenian is generally formed by adding ի Nominative աղջիկ girl գիրք book Genitive աղջիկի գիրքը the girl s book However there are certain words that are not formed this way For example words with ուն change to ան Nominative տուն house Genitive տան house s Dravidian languages editKannada edit In Kannada the genitive case endings are for masculine or feminine nouns ending in ಅ a ನ na Examples surya na of the sun for neuter nouns ending in ಅ a ದ da Examples mara da of the tree for all nouns ending in ಇ i ಈ i ಎ e or ಏ e ಅ a Examples mane y a of the house a linking y is added between the stem and the suffix for all nouns ending in ಉ u ಊ u ಋ r or ೠ r ಇನ ina Examples guru v ina of the teacher a linking v is added between the stem and the suffix Most postpositions in Kannada take the genitive case Tamil edit In Tamil the genitive case ending is the word உட ய or இன which signifies possession Depending on the last letter of the noun the genitive case endings may vary If the last letter is a consonant ம ய எழ த த like க ங ச ஞ ட ண த ந ப ம ய ர ல வ ழ then the suffix உட ய இன gets added Examples His அவன உட ய அவன ட ய Doctor s மர த த வர உட ய மர த த வர ட ய மர த த வர இன மர த த வர ன Kumar s க ம ர உட ய க ம ர ட ய க ம ர இன க ம ர ன See also editGenitive construction Possessive caseReferences edit Edzard Dietz Otto 2003 Sumerian Grammar BRILL p 36 ISBN 978 90 474 0340 1 Glossing Rules Department of Linguistics Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig Dictionary com genitive Noun related Particles Learn Japanese www guidetojapanese org Retrieved 2016 05 10 A dictionary of basic Japanese Grammar The Japan Times 1986 p 312 ISBN 4 7890 0454 6 Benjamin Thorpe ed 1861 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle Rerum Britannicarum Medii Aevi Scriptores Vol 23 Longman and Co p 372 Herbert Weir Smyth 1956 Greek Grammar Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press page 313 and elsewhere Vance Timothy J April 1993 Are Japanese Particles Clitics Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese 27 1 10 doi 10 2307 489122 JSTOR 489122 What is the small katakana ke in 霞ヶ丘 and 一ヶ月 sci lang japan Shin ya Asano Hiroyuki Una February 2010 Mood and Case with special reference to genitive Case conversion in Kansai Japanese Journal of East Asian Linguistics 19 1 37 59 doi 10 1007 s10831 009 9055 y S2CID 123519063 Yang Yong 2014 Generalized Case Theory and the Argument Omission Structure in Mandarin Chinese Chinese Lexical Semantics Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 8922 pp 441 447 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 14331 6 44 ISBN 978 3 319 14330 9 Olga Kagan 2007 Property Denoting NPs and Non Canonical Genitive Case PDF Proceedings of the 17th Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference CLC Publications Cornell University Archived PDF from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved January 27 2013 Further reading editKarlsson Fred 2018 Finnish A Comprehensive Grammar London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 82104 0 Anhava Jaakko 2015 Criteria For Case Forms in Finnish and Hungarian Grammars journal fi Helsinki Finnish Scholarly Journals Online External links edit nbsp Look up genitive case in Wiktionary the free dictionary German genitive case A lesson covering the genitive case in the German language Russian genitive 1 2 3 Genitive Case In Arabic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Genitive case amp oldid 1194186883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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