fbpx
Wikipedia

List of grammatical cases

This is a list of grammatical cases as they are used by various inflectional languages that have declension.

This list will mark the case, when it is used, an example of it, and then finally what language(s) the case is used in.

Place and time Edit

Note: Most cases used for location and motion can be used for time as well.

Location Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Adessive case close near/at/by the house Estonian | Finnish[1] | Hungarian | Lezgian | Lithuanian | Livonian | Tlingit | Tsez | Kven
Antessive case anterior before the house Dravidian languages[2]
Apudessive case[3] adjacent next to the house Tsez
Inessive case inside inside the house Basque | Erzya | Estonian | Lithuanian | Finnish[4] | Hungarian | Ossetic | Tsez | Kven
Intrative case between between the houses Limbu | Quechua
Locative case location at/on/in the house Armenian (Eastern) | Azeri | Bengali | Belarusian | Bosnian | Chuvash | Croatian | Czech | Gujarati | Hungarian | Inari Sámi | Inuktitut | Japanese[5] | Kashmiri | Latin (restricted) | Latvian | Lithuanian | Manchu | Northern Sámi | Polish | Quechua | Russian | Sanskrit | Serbian | Skolt Sámi | Slovak | Slovene | Sorbian | Tamil | Telugu | Tlingit | Turkish | Ukrainian | Uzbek
(Note: the case in Slavic languages termed the "locative case" in English is actually a prepositional case.)
Pergressive case vicinity in the vicinity of the house Kamu
Pertingent case contacting touching the house Tlingit | Archi
Postessive case posterior after the house Lezgian | Agul
Subessive case under under/below the house Tsez
Superessive case on the surface on (top of) the house Hungarian | Ossetic | Tsez | Finnish[6]

Motion from Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Ablative case near or inside away from the house Albanian | Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Azeri | Chuvash | Erzya | Estonian | Evenki | Finnish[1] | Hungarian | Inuktitut | Japanese[5] | Latin | Manchu | Ossetic | Quechua | Tamil[7] | Sanskrit | Tibetan | Tlingit | Tsez | Turkish | Uzbek | Yukaghir
Adelative case the vicinity from near the house Lezgian
Delative case the surface from (the top of) the house Hungarian | Finnish[6]
Egressive case marking the beginning of a movement or time beginning from the house Udmurt
Elative case the interior out of the house Erzya | Estonian | Evenki | Finnish[4] | Hungarian | Kven
Initiative case starting point of an action beginning from the house Manchu
Postelative case movement from behind from behind the house Lezgian

Motion to Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Allative case in Hungarian and in Finnish:
the adjacency
in Estonian and in Finnish:
the surface
to the house

onto the house
Erzya | Estonian | Finnish[1] | Hungarian | Inuktitut | Japanese[5] | Kashmiri | Lithuanian | Manchu | Tamil[7] | Tlingit | Tsez | Turkish | Tuvan | Uzbek | Kven
Illative case inside into the house Erzya | Estonian | Finnish[4] | Hungarian | Inari Sámi | Lithuanian | Northern Sámi | Skolt Sámi | Tamil[7] | Tsez | Kven
Lative case near or inside to/into the house Erzya | Finnish[6] | Quechua | Tsez | Turkish
Sublative case the surface or below on(to) the house/under the house Hungarian | Tsez | Finnish[6]
Superlative case the top on(to) the house/on top of the house Northeast Caucasian languages: Bezhta | Hinuq | Tsez
Terminative case marking the end of a movement or time as far as the house Chuvash | Estonian | Hungarian | Japanese[5] | Manchu | Quechua

Motion via Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Perlative case movement through or along through/along the house Evenki | Tocharian A & B | Warlpiri | Yankunytjatjara
Prolative case (= prosecutive case, vialis case) movement using a surface or way by way of/through the house Erzya | Estonian (rare) | Finnish (rare)[6] | Tlingit | Greenlandic | Inuktitut

Time Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Ablative case specifying a time when and within which E.g.: eō tempore, "at that time"; paucīs hōrīs, "within a few hours". Latin | Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Finnish | Turkish | Kven
Accusative case indicating duration of time
known as the accusative of duration of time
E.g.: multos annos, "for many years";
ducentos annos, "for 200 years".
Latin | German | Esperanto | Serbian |

Croatian | Russian | Turkish

Essive case used for specifying days and dates E.g.: maanantaina, "on Monday";
kuudentena joulukuuta, "on the 6th of December".
Finnish | Estonian | Kven
Limitative case specifying a deadline E.g.: 午後5時半までに (Gogo go-ji han made-ni) "by 5:30 PM" Japanese[5]
Temporal case specifying a time E.g.: hétkor "at seven" or hét órakor "at seven o'clock"; éjfélkor "at midnight"; karácsonykor "at Christmas". Hungarian | Finnish (rare)[6]

Chart for review for the basic cases Edit

Morphosyntactic alignment Edit

For meanings of the terms agent, patient, experiencer, and instrument, see thematic relation.

Case Usage Example Found in
Absolutive case (1) patient, experiencer; subject of an intransitive verb and direct object of a transitive verb he pushed the door and it opened Basque | Tibetan
Absolutive case (2) patient, involuntary experiencer he pushed the door and it opened; he slipped active-stative languages
Absolutive case (3) patient; experiencer; instrument he pushed the door with his hand and it opened Inuktitut
Accusative case (1) patient he pushed the door and it opened Akkadian | Albanian | Arabic | Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Azeri | Bosnian | Croatian | Czech | Erzya | Esperanto | Faroese | Finnish | German | Greek | Hungarian | Icelandic | Inari Sámi | Japanese[5] | Latin | Latvian | Lithuanian | Northern Sámi | Polish | Romanian | Russian | Sanskrit | Serbian | Skolt Sámi | Slovak | Slovene | Ukrainian | Georgian | Yiddish
Accusative case (2) direct object of a transitive verb; made from; about; for a time I see her Inuktitut | Persian | Turkish | Serbo-Croatian
Agentive case agent, specifies or asks about who or what; specific agent that is subset of a general topic or subject it was she who committed the crime; as for him, his head hurts Japanese[5]
Direct case direct subject or object of a transitive or intransitive verb I saw her; I gave her the book. Scottish Gaelic[8] | many languages with Austronesian Alignment.
Ergative case agent; subject of a transitive verb he pushed the door and it opened Basque | Chechen | Dyirbal | Georgian | Kashmiri | Samoan | Tibetan | Tlingit | Tsez
Ergative-genitive case agent, possession he pushed the door and it opened; her dog Classic Maya | Inuktitut
Instructive means, answers question how? by means of the house Estonian (rare) | Finnish[9]
Instrumental instrument, answers question using what? with the house Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Belarusian | Bosnian | Croatian | Czech | Evenki | Georgian | Japanese[5] | Kashmiri | Latvian | Lithuanian | Manchu | Polish | Russian | Sanskrit | Serbian | Slovak | Slovene | Tsez | Ukrainian | Yukaghir
Instrumental-comitative case instrument, in company with the house Chuvash | Hungarian | Tlingit
Nominative case (1) agent, experiencer; subject of a transitive or intransitive verb he pushed the door and it opened nominative–accusative languages (including marked nominative languages)
Nominative case (2) agent; voluntary experiencer he pushed the door and it opened; she paused active languages
Objective case (1) direct or indirect object of verb I saw her; I gave her the book. Bengali | Chuvash
Objective/Oblique (2) direct or indirect object of verb or object of preposition; a catch-all case for any situation except nominative or genitive I saw her; I gave her the book; with her. English | Swedish | Danish | Norwegian | Bulgarian
Oblique case all-round case; any situation except nominative or vocative concerning the house Anglo-Norman[citation needed] | Hindi | Old French | Old Provençal | Telugu | Tibetan
Intransitive case (also called passive or patient case) the subject of an intransitive verb or the logical complement of a transitive verb The door opened languages of the Caucasus | Ainu
Pegative case agent in a clause with a dative argument he gave the book to him Azoyú Tlapanec

Relation Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Ablative case all-round indirect case concerning the house Albanian | Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Sanskrit | Inuktitut | Kashmiri | Latin | Lithuanian | Finnish[1]
Aversive case avoiding or fear avoiding the house Warlpiri | Yidiny
Benefactive case for, for the benefit of, intended for for the house Basque | Quechua | Telugu
Caritative case because of presence or absence for want of a house Ngiyambaa
Causal case because, because of because of the house Quechua | Telugu
Causal-final case efficient or final cause for a house Chuvash | Hungarian
Comitative case accompanied with with the house Dumi | Ingush | Estonian | Finnish (rare)[9] | Inari Sámi | Japanese[5] | Kashmiri | Northern Sámi | Skolt Sámi | Ossetic (only in Iron) | Tibetan | Kven
Dative case shows direction or recipient for/to the house Albanian | Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Azeri | Belarusian | Bosnian | Croatian | Czech | Erzya | Faroese | Georgian | German | Ancient Greek | Hindi | Hungarian | Icelandic | Inuktitut | Japanese[5] | Kashmiri | Latin | Latvian | Lithuanian | Manchu | Ossetic | Polish | Romanian | Russian | Sanskrit | Scottish Gaelic | Serbian | Slovak | Slovene | Tsez | Turkish | Ukrainian | Yiddish

^† The case classically referred to as dative in Scottish Gaelic has shifted to, and is sometimes called, a prepositional case.

Distributive case distribution by piece per house Chuvash | Hungarian | Manchu | Finnish[6]
Distributive-temporal case frequency daily; on Sundays Hungarian; Finnish[6]
Genitive case shows generic relationship, generally ownership, but also composition, reference, description, etc. of the house; the house's Akkadian | Albanian | Arabic | Armenian (Eastern) | Armenian (Western) | Azeri | Bengali | Belarusian | Bosnian | Chuvash | Croatian | Czech | Danish | Dutch | English | Erzya | Estonian | Faroese | Finnish | Georgian | German | Greek | Hungarian | Icelandic | Inari Sámi | Irish | Japanese[5] | Kashmiri | Latin | Latvian | Lithuanian | Manchu | Northern Sámi | Norwegian | Persian[10] | Polish | Romanian | Russian | Sanskrit | Scottish Gaelic | Serbian | Skolt Sámi | Slovak | Slovene | Swedish | Tibetan | Tsez | Turkish | Ukrainian | Kven
Ornative case endowment equipped with a house Dumi; Hungarian
Possessed case passive possession the house is owned Tlingit
Possessive case direct ownership owned by the house English | Turkish
Privative case lacking, without without a house Chuvash | Kamu | Martuthunira | Wagiman
Semblative/Similative case similarity, comparing that tree is like a house Wagiman
Sociative case along with, together with (together) with the house Hungarian | Ossetic
Substitutive case substituting, instead of instead of him Archi

Semantics Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Partitive case used for amounts three (of the) houses Estonian | Finnish[11] | Inari Sámi | Russian | Skolt Sámi | Kven
Prepositional case when prepositions precede the noun in/on/about the house Belarusian | Czech | Polish | Russian | Scottish Gaelic | Slovak | Ukrainian

^† This case is called lokál in Czech and Slovak, miejscownik in Polish, місцевий (miscevý) in Ukrainian and месны (miesny) in Belarusian; these names imply that this case also covers locative case.
^‡ The prepositional case in Scottish Gaelic is classically referred to as a dative case.

Vocative case used for addressing, with or without a preposition Hey, father!
O father!
Father!
Albanian (rare) | Belarusian (rare) | Bulgarian | Bosnian | Croatian | Czech | Georgian | Greek | Hindi | Irish | Itelmen | Kashmiri | Ket | Latin | Latvian | Lithuanian | Macedonian | Nivkh | Polish | Romanian | Russian (rare) | Sanskrit | Scottish Gaelic | Serbian | Slovak (rare) | Telugu | Ukrainian | Nahuatl

State Edit

Case Usage Example Found in
Abessive case lacking without the house Erzya | Estonian | Finnish[9] | Inari Sámi | Skolt Sámi | Quechua | Kven
Adverbial case temporary state as a house Georgian | Udmurt | Finnic languages | Abkhaz
Comparative case comparison like the house Dumi | Mari | Nivkh
Equative case similarity similar to the house Ossetic | Sumerian | Tlingit | Tsez
Essive case temporary state of being as the house Estonian | Finnish[11] | Inari Sámi | Inuktitut | Middle Egyptian | Northern Sámi | Skolt Sámi | Tsez
Essive-formal case marking a condition as a quality (a kind of shape) as a house Hungarian | Manchu
Essive-modal case marking a condition as a quality (a way of being) as a house Hungarian
Exessive case marking a transition from a condition from being a house (i.e., it stops being a house) Estonian (rare) | Finnish (dialectal)
Formal case marking a condition as a quality as a house Hungarian
Identical case showing equality being the house Manchu
Orientative case positive orientation turned towards the house Chukchi | Manchu
Revertive case negative orientation against the house Manchu
Translative case change of a condition into another (turning) into a house Erzya | Estonian | Finnish[11] | Hungarian | Khanty | Manchu | Kven

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Mäkinen, Panu. "Finnish Grammar - Exterior local cases". users.jyu.fi. University of Jyväskylä. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  2. ^ S. Agesthialingom, Prakya Sreesaila Subrahmanyam, Dravidian Linguistics- V: (proceedings of the Seminar on Dravidian Linguistics- V), Page 275, 1976 - 582 pages, Google book search link quote: "(6) 'before' (antessive), (7) 'behind, ..."
  3. ^ Robert, Stéphane Robert (1999). Language Diversity and Cognitive Representations. p. 229. ISBN 978-9027223555.
  4. ^ a b c Mäkinen, Panu. "Finnish Grammar - Interior Local Cases". users.jyu.fi. University of Jyväskylä. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Takahashi, Tarou; et al. (2010). A Japanese Grammar (in Japanese) (4 ed.). Japan: Hitsuji Shobou. p. 27. ISBN 978-4-89476-244-2.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Mäkinen, Panu. "Finnish grammar - adverbial cases". users.jyu.fi. University of Jyväskylä. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  7. ^ a b c http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/public/h_sch_9a.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ "Case (definition) - Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki". gaelicgrammar.org. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  9. ^ a b c Mäkinen, Panu. "Finnish Grammar - Means Cases". users.jyu.fi. University of Jyväskylä. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  10. ^ Behrang QasemiZadeh, Saeed Rahimi, Persian in MULTEXT-East Framework, 5th International Conference on NLP, FinTAL 2006 Turku, Finland, August 23–25, 2006 Proceedings
  11. ^ a b c Mäkinen, Panu. "Finnish Grammar - General Local Cases". users.jyu.fi. University of Jyväskylä. Retrieved 6 March 2015.

list, grammatical, cases, list, cases, redirects, here, legal, cases, lists, case, this, list, grammatical, cases, they, used, various, inflectional, languages, that, have, declension, this, list, will, mark, case, when, used, example, then, finally, what, lan. List of cases redirects here For legal cases see Lists of case law This is a list of grammatical cases as they are used by various inflectional languages that have declension This list will mark the case when it is used an example of it and then finally what language s the case is used in Contents 1 Place and time 1 1 Location 1 2 Motion from 1 3 Motion to 1 4 Motion via 1 5 Time 1 6 Chart for review for the basic cases 2 Morphosyntactic alignment 3 Relation 4 Semantics 5 State 6 ReferencesPlace and time EditNote Most cases used for location and motion can be used for time as well Location Edit Case Usage Example Found inAdessive case close near at by the house Estonian Finnish 1 Hungarian Lezgian Lithuanian Livonian Tlingit Tsez KvenAntessive case anterior before the house Dravidian languages 2 Apudessive case 3 adjacent next to the house TsezInessive case inside inside the house Basque Erzya Estonian Lithuanian Finnish 4 Hungarian Ossetic Tsez KvenIntrative case between between the houses Limbu QuechuaLocative case location at on in the house Armenian Eastern Azeri Bengali Belarusian Bosnian Chuvash Croatian Czech Gujarati Hungarian Inari Sami Inuktitut Japanese 5 Kashmiri Latin restricted Latvian Lithuanian Manchu Northern Sami Polish Quechua Russian Sanskrit Serbian Skolt Sami Slovak Slovene Sorbian Tamil Telugu Tlingit Turkish Ukrainian Uzbek Note the case in Slavic languages termed the locative case in English is actually a prepositional case Pergressive case vicinity in the vicinity of the house KamuPertingent case contacting touching the house Tlingit ArchiPostessive case posterior after the house Lezgian AgulSubessive case under under below the house TsezSuperessive case on the surface on top of the house Hungarian Ossetic Tsez Finnish 6 Motion from Edit Case Usage Example Found inAblative case near or inside away from the house Albanian Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Azeri Chuvash Erzya Estonian Evenki Finnish 1 Hungarian Inuktitut Japanese 5 Latin Manchu Ossetic Quechua Tamil 7 Sanskrit Tibetan Tlingit Tsez Turkish Uzbek YukaghirAdelative case the vicinity from near the house LezgianDelative case the surface from the top of the house Hungarian Finnish 6 Egressive case marking the beginning of a movement or time beginning from the house UdmurtElative case the interior out of the house Erzya Estonian Evenki Finnish 4 Hungarian KvenInitiative case starting point of an action beginning from the house ManchuPostelative case movement from behind from behind the house LezgianMotion to Edit Case Usage Example Found inAllative case in Hungarian and in Finnish the adjacencyin Estonian and in Finnish the surface to the houseonto the house Erzya Estonian Finnish 1 Hungarian Inuktitut Japanese 5 Kashmiri Lithuanian Manchu Tamil 7 Tlingit Tsez Turkish Tuvan Uzbek KvenIllative case inside into the house Erzya Estonian Finnish 4 Hungarian Inari Sami Lithuanian Northern Sami Skolt Sami Tamil 7 Tsez KvenLative case near or inside to into the house Erzya Finnish 6 Quechua Tsez TurkishSublative case the surface or below on to the house under the house Hungarian Tsez Finnish 6 Superlative case the top on to the house on top of the house Northeast Caucasian languages Bezhta Hinuq TsezTerminative case marking the end of a movement or time as far as the house Chuvash Estonian Hungarian Japanese 5 Manchu QuechuaMotion via Edit Case Usage Example Found inPerlative case movement through or along through along the house Evenki Tocharian A amp B Warlpiri YankunytjatjaraProlative case prosecutive case vialis case movement using a surface or way by way of through the house Erzya Estonian rare Finnish rare 6 Tlingit Greenlandic InuktitutTime Edit Case Usage Example Found inAblative case specifying a time when and within which E g eō tempore at that time paucis hōris within a few hours Latin Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Finnish Turkish KvenAccusative case indicating duration of timeknown as the accusative of duration of time E g multos annos for many years ducentos annos for 200 years Latin German Esperanto Serbian Croatian Russian TurkishEssive case used for specifying days and dates E g maanantaina on Monday kuudentena joulukuuta on the 6th of December Finnish Estonian KvenLimitative case specifying a deadline E g 午後5時半までに Gogo go ji han made ni by 5 30 PM Japanese 5 Temporal case specifying a time E g hetkor at seven or het orakor at seven o clock ejfelkor at midnight karacsonykor at Christmas Hungarian Finnish rare 6 Chart for review for the basic cases Edit interior surface adjacency statefrom Elative Delative Ablative Exessiveat in Inessive Superessive Adessive Essive in to Illative Sublative Allative Translativevia Perlative ProlativeMorphosyntactic alignment EditFor meanings of the terms agent patient experiencer and instrument see thematic relation Case Usage Example Found inAbsolutive case 1 patient experiencer subject of an intransitive verb and direct object of a transitive verb he pushed the door and it opened Basque TibetanAbsolutive case 2 patient involuntary experiencer he pushed the door and it opened he slipped active stative languagesAbsolutive case 3 patient experiencer instrument he pushed the door with his hand and it opened InuktitutAccusative case 1 patient he pushed the door and it opened Akkadian Albanian Arabic Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Azeri Bosnian Croatian Czech Erzya Esperanto Faroese Finnish German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Inari Sami Japanese 5 Latin Latvian Lithuanian Northern Sami Polish Romanian Russian Sanskrit Serbian Skolt Sami Slovak Slovene Ukrainian Georgian YiddishAccusative case 2 direct object of a transitive verb made from about for a time I see her Inuktitut Persian Turkish Serbo CroatianAgentive case agent specifies or asks about who or what specific agent that is subset of a general topic or subject it was she who committed the crime as for him his head hurts Japanese 5 Direct case direct subject or object of a transitive or intransitive verb I saw her I gave her the book Scottish Gaelic 8 many languages with Austronesian Alignment Ergative case agent subject of a transitive verb he pushed the door and it opened Basque Chechen Dyirbal Georgian Kashmiri Samoan Tibetan Tlingit TsezErgative genitive case agent possession he pushed the door and it opened her dog Classic Maya InuktitutInstructive means answers question how by means of the house Estonian rare Finnish 9 Instrumental instrument answers question using what with the house Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Belarusian Bosnian Croatian Czech Evenki Georgian Japanese 5 Kashmiri Latvian Lithuanian Manchu Polish Russian Sanskrit Serbian Slovak Slovene Tsez Ukrainian YukaghirInstrumental comitative case instrument in company with the house Chuvash Hungarian TlingitNominative case 1 agent experiencer subject of a transitive or intransitive verb he pushed the door and it opened nominative accusative languages including marked nominative languages Nominative case 2 agent voluntary experiencer he pushed the door and it opened she paused active languagesObjective case 1 direct or indirect object of verb I saw her I gave her the book Bengali ChuvashObjective Oblique 2 direct or indirect object of verb or object of preposition a catch all case for any situation except nominative or genitive I saw her I gave her the book with her English Swedish Danish Norwegian BulgarianOblique case all round case any situation except nominative or vocative concerning the house Anglo Norman citation needed Hindi Old French Old Provencal Telugu TibetanIntransitive case also called passive or patient case the subject of an intransitive verb or the logical complement of a transitive verb The door opened languages of the Caucasus AinuPegative case agent in a clause with a dative argument he gave the book to him Azoyu TlapanecRelation EditCase Usage Example Found inAblative case all round indirect case concerning the house Albanian Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Sanskrit Inuktitut Kashmiri Latin Lithuanian Finnish 1 Aversive case avoiding or fear avoiding the house Warlpiri YidinyBenefactive case for for the benefit of intended for for the house Basque Quechua TeluguCaritative case because of presence or absence for want of a house NgiyambaaCausal case because because of because of the house Quechua TeluguCausal final case efficient or final cause for a house Chuvash HungarianComitative case accompanied with with the house Dumi Ingush Estonian Finnish rare 9 Inari Sami Japanese 5 Kashmiri Northern Sami Skolt Sami Ossetic only in Iron Tibetan KvenDative case shows direction or recipient for to the house Albanian Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Azeri Belarusian Bosnian Croatian Czech Erzya Faroese Georgian German Ancient Greek Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Inuktitut Japanese 5 Kashmiri Latin Latvian Lithuanian Manchu Ossetic Polish Romanian Russian Sanskrit Scottish Gaelic Serbian Slovak Slovene Tsez Turkish Ukrainian Yiddish The case classically referred to as dative in Scottish Gaelic has shifted to and is sometimes called a prepositional case Distributive case distribution by piece per house Chuvash Hungarian Manchu Finnish 6 Distributive temporal case frequency daily on Sundays Hungarian Finnish 6 Genitive case shows generic relationship generally ownership but also composition reference description etc of the house the house s Akkadian Albanian Arabic Armenian Eastern Armenian Western Azeri Bengali Belarusian Bosnian Chuvash Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Erzya Estonian Faroese Finnish Georgian German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Inari Sami Irish Japanese 5 Kashmiri Latin Latvian Lithuanian Manchu Northern Sami Norwegian Persian 10 Polish Romanian Russian Sanskrit Scottish Gaelic Serbian Skolt Sami Slovak Slovene Swedish Tibetan Tsez Turkish Ukrainian KvenOrnative case endowment equipped with a house Dumi HungarianPossessed case passive possession the house is owned TlingitPossessive case direct ownership owned by the house English TurkishPrivative case lacking without without a house Chuvash Kamu Martuthunira WagimanSemblative Similative case similarity comparing that tree is like a house WagimanSociative case along with together with together with the house Hungarian OsseticSubstitutive case substituting instead of instead of him ArchiSemantics EditCase Usage Example Found inPartitive case used for amounts three of the houses Estonian Finnish 11 Inari Sami Russian Skolt Sami KvenPrepositional case when prepositions precede the noun in on about the house Belarusian Czech Polish Russian Scottish Gaelic Slovak Ukrainian This case is called lokal in Czech and Slovak miejscownik in Polish miscevij miscevy in Ukrainian and mesny miesny in Belarusian these names imply that this case also covers locative case The prepositional case in Scottish Gaelic is classically referred to as a dative case Vocative case used for addressing with or without a preposition Hey father O father Father Albanian rare Belarusian rare Bulgarian Bosnian Croatian Czech Georgian Greek Hindi Irish Itelmen Kashmiri Ket Latin Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Nivkh Polish Romanian Russian rare Sanskrit Scottish Gaelic Serbian Slovak rare Telugu Ukrainian NahuatlState EditCase Usage Example Found inAbessive case lacking without the house Erzya Estonian Finnish 9 Inari Sami Skolt Sami Quechua KvenAdverbial case temporary state as a house Georgian Udmurt Finnic languages AbkhazComparative case comparison like the house Dumi Mari NivkhEquative case similarity similar to the house Ossetic Sumerian Tlingit TsezEssive case temporary state of being as the house Estonian Finnish 11 Inari Sami Inuktitut Middle Egyptian Northern Sami Skolt Sami TsezEssive formal case marking a condition as a quality a kind of shape as a house Hungarian ManchuEssive modal case marking a condition as a quality a way of being as a house HungarianExessive case marking a transition from a condition from being a house i e it stops being a house Estonian rare Finnish dialectal Formal case marking a condition as a quality as a house HungarianIdentical case showing equality being the house ManchuOrientative case positive orientation turned towards the house Chukchi ManchuRevertive case negative orientation against the house ManchuTranslative case change of a condition into another turning into a house Erzya Estonian Finnish 11 Hungarian Khanty Manchu KvenReferences EditThis 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 List of grammatical cases news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message a b c d Makinen Panu Finnish Grammar Exterior local cases users jyu fi University of Jyvaskyla Retrieved 6 March 2015 S Agesthialingom Prakya Sreesaila Subrahmanyam Dravidian Linguistics V proceedings of the Seminar on Dravidian Linguistics V Page 275 1976 582 pages Google book search link quote 6 before antessive 7 behind Robert Stephane Robert 1999 Language Diversity and Cognitive Representations p 229 ISBN 978 9027223555 a b c Makinen Panu Finnish Grammar Interior Local Cases users jyu fi University of Jyvaskyla Retrieved 6 March 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k Takahashi Tarou et al 2010 A Japanese Grammar in Japanese 4 ed Japan Hitsuji Shobou p 27 ISBN 978 4 89476 244 2 a b c d e f g h Makinen Panu Finnish grammar adverbial cases users jyu fi University of Jyvaskyla Retrieved 5 March 2015 a b c http ccat sas upenn edu haroldfs public h sch 9a pdf bare URL PDF Case definition Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki gaelicgrammar org Retrieved 26 April 2023 a b c Makinen Panu Finnish Grammar Means Cases users jyu fi University of Jyvaskyla Retrieved 6 March 2015 Behrang QasemiZadeh Saeed Rahimi Persian in MULTEXT East Framework 5th International Conference on NLP FinTAL 2006 Turku Finland August 23 25 2006 Proceedings a b c Makinen Panu Finnish Grammar General Local Cases users jyu fi University of Jyvaskyla Retrieved 6 March 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of grammatical cases amp oldid 1170955229, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.