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Grammatical features |
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A grammatical case is a category of nouns and noun modifiers (determiners, adjectives, participles, and numerals) that corresponds to one or more potential grammatical functions for a nominal group in a wording. [1] In various languages, nominal groups consisting of a noun and its modifiers belong to one of a few such categories. For instance, in English, one says I see them and they see me: the nominative pronouns I/they represent the perceiver and the accusative pronouns me/them represent the phenomenon perceived. Here, nominative and accusative are cases, that is, categories of pronouns corresponding to the functions they have in representation.
English has largely lost its inflected case system but personal pronouns still have three cases, which are simplified forms of the nominative, accusative (including functions formerly handled by the dative) and genitive cases. They are used with personal pronouns: subjective case (I, you, he, she, it, we, they, who, whoever), objective case (me, you, him, her, it, us, them, whom, whomever) and possessive case (my, mine; your, yours; his; her, hers; its; our, ours; their, theirs; whose; whosever). [2] [3] Forms such as I, he and we are used for the subject ("I kicked John"), and forms such as me, him and us are used for the object ("John kicked me").
As a language evolves, cases can merge (for instance, in Ancient Greek, the locative case merged with the dative), a phenomenon known as syncretism. [4]
Languages such as Sanskrit, Kannada, Latin, Tamil, and Russian have extensive case systems, with nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and determiners all inflecting (usually by means of different suffixes) to indicate their case. The number of cases differs between languages: Persian has three; modern English has three but for pronouns only; Torlakian dialects, Classical and Modern Standard Arabic have three; German, Icelandic, Modern Greek, and Irish have four; Albanian, Romanian and Ancient Greek have five; Bengali, Latin, Russian, Slovak, Kajkavian, Slovenian, and Turkish each have at least six; Armenian, Czech, Georgian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Serbo-Croatian and Ukrainian have seven; Mongolian, Marathi, Sanskrit, Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Assamese and Greenlandic have eight; Old Nubian and Sinhalese have nine; Basque has 13; Estonian has 14; Finnish has 15; Hungarian has 18; and Tsez has at least 36 cases.[ citation needed ]
Commonly encountered cases include nominative, accusative, dative and genitive. A role that one of those languages marks by case is often marked in English with a preposition. For example, the English prepositional phrase with (his) foot (as in "John kicked the ball with his foot") might be rendered in Russian using a single noun in the instrumental case, or in Ancient Greek as τῷ ποδί (tôi podí, meaning "the foot") with both words (the definite article, and the noun πούς (poús) "foot") changing to dative form.
More formally, case has been defined as "a system of marking dependent nouns for the type of relationship they bear to their heads". [5] : p.1 Cases should be distinguished from thematic roles such as agent and patient . They are often closely related, and in languages such as Latin, several thematic roles are realised by a somewhat fixed case for deponent verbs, but cases are a syntagmatic/phrasal category, and thematic roles are the function of a syntagma/phrase in a larger structure. Languages having cases often exhibit free word order, as thematic roles are not required to be marked by position in the sentence.
It is widely accepted that the Ancient Greeks had a certain idea of the forms of a name in their own language. A fragment of Anacreon seems to prove this. Grammatical cases were first recognized by the Stoics and from some philosophers of the Peripatetic school. [6] [7] The advancements of those philosophers were later employed by the philologists of the Library of Alexandria. [1] [6]
The English word case used in this sense comes from the Latin casus, which is derived from the verb cadere , "to fall", from the Proto-Indo-European root ḱh₂d- . [8] The Latin word is a calque of the Greek πτῶσις, ptôsis, lit. "falling, fall". [9] The sense is that all other cases are considered to have "fallen" away from the nominative. This imagery is also reflected in the word declension , from Latin declinere , "to lean", from the PIE root *ḱley- .
The equivalent to "case" in several other European languages also derives from casus, including cas in French, caso in Italian and Kasus in German. The Russian word паде́ж (padyézh) is a calque from Greek and similarly contains a root meaning "fall", and the German Fall and Czech pád simply mean "fall", and are used for both the concept of grammatical case and to refer to physical falls. The Dutch equivalent naamval translates as 'noun case', in which 'noun' has the older meaning of both 'adjective (noun)' and '(substantive) noun'. The Finnish equivalent is sija , whose main meaning is "position" or "place".
Similar to Latin, Sanskrit uses the term विभक्ति (vibhakti) [10] which may be interpreted as the specific or distinct "bendings" or "experiences" of a word, from the verb भुज् (bhuj) [11] and the prefix वि (vi), [12] and names the individual cases using ordinal numbers.
Although not very prominent in modern English, cases featured much more saliently in Old English and other ancient Indo-European languages, such as Latin, Old Persian, Ancient Greek, and Sanskrit. Historically, the Indo-European languages had eight morphological cases, although modern languages typically have fewer, using prepositions and word order to convey information that had previously been conveyed using distinct noun forms. Among modern languages, cases still feature prominently in most of the Balto-Slavic languages (except Macedonian and Bulgarian [13] ), with most having six to eight cases, as well as Icelandic, German and Modern Greek, which have four. In German, cases are mostly marked on articles and adjectives, and less so on nouns. In Icelandic, articles, adjectives, personal names and nouns are all marked for case, making it the most conservative Germanic language.
The eight historical Indo-European cases are as follows, with examples either of the English case or of the English syntactic alternative to case:
Case | Indicates | Sample case words | Sample sentence | Interrogative | Notes |
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Nominative | Subject of a finite verb | we | We went to the store. | Who or what? | Corresponds to English's subject pronouns. |
Accusative | Direct object of a transitive verb | us, for us, the (object) | The clerk remembered us. John waited for us at the bus stop. Obey the law. | Whom or what? | Corresponds to English's object pronouns and preposition for construction before the object, often marked by a definite article the. Together with dative, it forms modern English's oblique case. |
Dative | Indirect object of a verb | us, to us, to the (object) | The clerk gave us a discount. The clerk gave a discount to us. According to the law... | Whom or to what? | Corresponds to English's object pronouns and preposition to construction before the object, often marked by a definite article the. Together with accusative, it forms modern English's oblique case. |
Ablative | Movement away from | from us | The pigeon flew from us to a steeple. | Whence? From where/whom? | |
Genitive | Possessor of another noun | 's, of (the) | John's book was on the table. The pages of the book turned yellow. The table is made out of wood. | Whose? From what or what of? | Roughly corresponds to English's possessive (possessive determiners and pronouns) and preposition of construction. |
Case | Indicates | Sample case words | Sample sentence | Interrogative | Notes |
Vocative | Addressee | John | John, are you all right? Hello, John! O John, how are you! (archaic) | Roughly corresponds to the archaic use of "O" in English. | |
Locative | Location, either physical or temporal | in Japan, at the bus stop, in the future | We live in Japan. John is waiting for us at the bus stop. We will see what will happen in the future. | Where or wherein? When? | Roughly corresponds to English prepositions in, on, at, and by and other less common prepositions. |
Instrumental | A means or tool used or companion present in/while performing an action | with a mop, by hand with John | We wiped the floor with a mop. This letter was written by hand. I took a trip there with John. | How? With what or using what? By what means? With whom? | Corresponds to English prepositions by, with and via as well as synonymous constructions such as using, by use of and through. |
All of the above are just rough descriptions; the precise distinctions vary significantly from language to language, and as such they are often more complex. Case is based fundamentally on changes to the noun to indicate the noun's role in the sentence – one of the defining features of so-called fusional languages. Old English was a fusional language, but Modern English does not work this way.
Modern English has largely abandoned the inflectional case system of Proto-Indo-European in favor of analytic constructions. The personal pronouns of Modern English retain morphological case more strongly than any other word class (a remnant of the more extensive case system of Old English). For other pronouns, and all nouns, adjectives, and articles, grammatical function is indicated only by word order, by prepositions, and by the "Saxon genitive" (-'s). [a]
Taken as a whole, English personal pronouns are typically said to have three morphological cases:
Most English personal pronouns have five forms: the nominative case form, the oblique case form, a distinct reflexive or intensive form (such as myself, ourselves) which is based upon the possessive determiner form but is coreferential to a preceding instance of nominative or oblique, and the possessive case forms, which include both a determiner form (such as my, our) and a predicatively-used independent form (such as mine, ours) which is distinct (with two exceptions: the third person singular masculine he and the third person singular neuter it, which use the same form for both determiner and independent [his car, it is his]). The interrogative personal pronoun who exhibits the greatest diversity of forms within the modern English pronoun system, having definite nominative, oblique, and genitive forms (who, whom, whose) and equivalently-coordinating indefinite forms (whoever, whomever, and whosever).
Although English pronouns can have subject and object forms (he/him, she/her), nouns show only a singular/plural and a possessive/non-possessive distinction (e.g. chair, chairs, chair's, chairs'); there is no manifest difference in the form of chair between "The chair is here." (subject) and "I own the chair." (direct object), a distinction made instead by word order and context.
Cases can be ranked in the following hierarchy, where a language that does not have a given case will tend not to have any cases to the right of the missing case: [5] : p.89
This is, however, only a general tendency. Many forms of Central German, such as Colognian and Luxembourgish, have a dative case but lack a genitive. In Irish nouns, the nominative and accusative have fallen together, whereas the dative–locative has remained separate in some paradigms; Irish also has genitive and vocative cases. In many modern Indo-Aryan languages, the accusative, genitive, and dative have merged to an oblique case, but many of these languages still retain vocative, locative, and ablative cases. Old English had an instrumental case, but neither a locative nor a prepositional case.
The traditional case order (nom-gen-dat-acc) was expressed for the first time in The Art of Grammar in the 2nd century BC:
There are five Cases, the right [nominative], the generic [genitive], the dative, the accusative, and the vocative. [20] |
Latin grammars, such as Ars grammatica , followed the Greek tradition, but added the ablative case of Latin. Later other European languages also followed that Graeco-Roman tradition.
However, for some languages, such as Latin, due to case syncretism the order may be changed for convenience, where the accusative or the vocative cases are placed after the nominative and before the genitive. For example:
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For similar reasons, the customary order of the four cases in Icelandic is nominative–accusative–dative–genitive, as illustrated below:
number | case | masculine | feminine | neuter | neuter |
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singular | nom. | hattur | borg | glas | gler |
acc. | hatt | ||||
dat. | hatti | glasi | gleri | ||
gen. | hatts | borgar | glass | glers | |
plural | nom. | hattar | borgir | glös | gler |
acc. | hatta | ||||
dat. | höttum | borgum | glösum | gler(j)um | |
gen. | hatta | borga | glasa | gler(j)a |
Sanskrit similarly arranges cases in the order nominative-accusative-instrumental-dative-ablative-genitive-locative-vocative. [10] The cases are individually named as the "first," "second," "third" and so on. [10] For example, the common "when-then" construction is called the सति सप्तमी (Sati Saptami) [21] or "The Good Seventh" as it uses the locative, which is the seventh case.
In the most common [5] case concord system, only the head-word (the noun) in a phrase is marked for case. This system appears in many Papuan languages as well as in Turkic, Mongolian, Quechua, Dravidian, Indo-Aryan, and other languages. In Basque and various Amazonian and Australian languages, only the phrase-final word (not necessarily the noun) is marked for case. In many Indo-European, Finnic, and Semitic languages, case is marked on the noun, the determiner, and usually the adjective. Other systems are less common. In some languages, there is double-marking of a word as both genitive (to indicate semantic role) and another case such as accusative (to establish concord with the head noun). [22]
Declension is the process or result of altering nouns to the correct grammatical cases. Languages with rich nominal inflection (using grammatical cases for many purposes) typically have a number of identifiable declension classes, or groups of nouns with a similar pattern of case inflection or declension. Sanskrit has six declension classes, whereas Latin is traditionally considered to have five, and Ancient Greek three. [23] For example, Slovak has fifteen noun declension classes, five for each gender (the number may vary depending on which paradigms are counted or omitted, this mainly concerns those that modify declension of foreign words; refer to article).
In Indo-European languages, declension patterns may depend on a variety of factors, such as gender, number, phonological environment, and irregular historical factors. Pronouns sometimes have separate paradigms. In some languages, particularly Slavic languages, a case may contain different groups of endings depending on whether the word is a noun or an adjective. A single case may contain many different endings, some of which may even be derived from different roots. For example, in Polish, the genitive case has -a, -u, -ów, -i/-y, -e- for nouns, and -ego, -ej, -ich/-ych for adjectives. To a lesser extent, a noun's animacy or humanness may add another layer of complexity. For example, in Russian:
Кот
Kot-∅
cat-NOM.AN.
ловит
lóvit
catches
мышей
myshéy.
mice
(The) cat catches mice.
Столб
Stolb-∅
pillar-NOM.INAN
держит
dérzhit
holds
крышу
krýshu.
roof
(The) pillar holds a/the roof)
vs.
Пётр
Pyotr
Peter
гладит
gládit
strokes
кота
kot-á
cat-ACC.AN
Peter strokes a/the cat
and
Пётр
Pyotr
Peter
ломает
lomáyet
breaks
столб
stolb-∅
pillar-ACC.INAN
Peter breaks a/the pillar
Australian languages represent a diversity of case paradigms in terms of their alignment (i.e. nominative-accusative vs. ergative-absolutive) and the morpho-syntactic properties of case inflection including where/how many times across a noun phrase the case morphology will appear. For typical r-expression noun phrases, most Australian languages follow a basic ERG-ABS template with additional cases for peripheral arguments; however, many Australian languages, the function of case marking extends beyond the prototypical function of specifying the syntactic and semantic relation of an NP to a predicate. [24] Dench and Evans (1988) [25] use a five-part system for categorizing the functional roles of case marking in Australian languages. They are enumerated below as they appear in Senge (2015): [24]
To illustrate this paradigm in action, take the case-system of Wanyjirra for whose description Senge invokes this system. Each of the case markers functions in the prototypical relational sense, but many extend into these additional functions:
Derivational | Adnominal | Relational | Referential | Subordinator | ||
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C-SUB* | T-SUB* | |||||
Ergative | + | + | + | |||
Dative | + | + | + | + | ||
Locative | + | + | + | |||
Allative | + | + | ||||
Purposive | + | + | ||||
Ablative | + | |||||
Elative | + | + | + | + | + | |
Comitative | + | |||||
Originative | + | + | ||||
Proprietive | + | + | + | |||
Privative | + | + | + |
Wanyjirra is an example of a language in which case marking occurs on all sub-constituents of the NP; see the following example in which the demonstrative, head, and quantifier of the noun phrase all receive ergative marking:
yalu-nggu
DIST-ERG
mawun-du
man-ERG
gujarra-lu
two-ERG
ngu=wula
REAL=3.AUG.SBJ
yunbarn-ana
sing-PRES
junba
corroboree.ABS
Those two men are singing corroboree.
However, this is by no means always the case or even the norm for Australian languages. For many, case-affixes are considered special-clitics (i.e. phrasal-affixes, see Anderson 2005 [26] ) because they have a singular fixed position within the phrase. For Bardi, the case marker usually appears on the first phrasal constituent [27] while the opposite is the case for Wangkatja (i.e. the case marker is attracted to the rightmost edge of the phrase). [28] See the following examples respectively:
Boordiji-nim
fat-ERG
niiwandi
tall
aamba
man
i-na-m-boo-na
3-TR-PST-poke-REM.PST
aril
fish
The tall fat man speared a fish.
Basque has the following cases, with examples given in the indefinite, definite singular, definite plural, and definite close plural of the word etxe, "house", "home":
Some of them can be re-declined, even more than once, as if they were nouns (usually, from the genitive locative case), although they mainly work as noun modifiers before a noun clause:
In German, grammatical case is largely preserved in the articles and adjectives, but nouns have lost many of their original endings. Below is an example of case inflection in German using the masculine definite article and one of the German words for "sailor".
An example with the feminine definite article with the German word for "woman".
An example with the neuter definite article with the German word for "book".
Proper names for cities have two genitive nouns:
Hindi-Urdu (Hindustani) has three noun cases, the nominative,oblique, and vocative cases. The vocative case is now obsolete (but still used in certain regions[ citation needed ]) and the oblique case doubles as the vocative case. The pronoun cases in Hindi-Urdu are the nominative, ergative, accusative, dative, and two oblique cases. [30] [31] The case forms which do not exist for certain pronouns are constructed using primary postpositions (or other grammatical particles) and the oblique case (shown in parentheses in the table below).
The other cases are constructed adpositionally using the case-marking postpositions using the nouns and pronouns in their oblique cases. The oblique case is used exclusively with these 8 case-marking postpositions of Hindi-Urdu forming 10 grammatical cases, which are: ergative ने (ne), dative and accusative को (ko), instrumental and ablative से (se), genitive का (kā), inessive में (mẽ), adessive पे (pe), terminative तक (tak), semblative सा (sā). [32]
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1कौन(kaun) is the animate interrogative pronoun and क्या (kyā) is the inanimate interrogative pronoun. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Note: Hindi lacks 3rd person personal pronouns and to compensate the demonstrative pronouns are used as 3rd person personal pronouns. |
An example of a Latin case inflection is given below, using the singular forms of the Latin term for "cook", which belongs to Latin's second declension class.
For some toponyms, a seventh case, the locative, also exists, such as Mediolānī (in Mediolanum).
The Romance languages have largely abandoned or simplified the grammatical cases of Latin. Much like English, most Romance case markers survive only in pronouns.
Typically in Lithuanian, only the inflection changes for the seven different grammatical cases:
Hungarian declension is relatively simple with regular suffixes attached to the vast majority of nouns. The following table lists all of the cases used in Hungarian.
Case | Meaning | Suffix | Example | Meaning of the example |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative case | subject | ∅ | ház | house (as a subject) |
Accusative case | direct object | -ot/(-at)/-et/-öt/-t | házat | house (as an object) |
Dative case | indirect object | -nak/-nek | háznak | to the house |
Genitive case | possession | -é | házé | of the house (belonging to) |
Instrumental-comitative case | with | -val/-vel (Assim.) | házzal | with the house |
Causal-final case | for, for the purpose of | -ért | házért | for the house |
Translative case | into (used to show transformation) | -vá/-vé (Assim.) | házzá | [turn] into a house |
Terminative case | as far as, up to | -ig | házig | as far as the house |
Illative case | into (location) | -ba/-be | házba | into the house |
Adessive case | at | -nál/-nél | háznál | at the house |
Ablative case | from (away from) | -tól/-től | háztól | (away) from the house |
Elative case | from (out of) | -ból/-ből | házból | from the inside of the house |
Sublative case | onto (movement towards a thing) | -ra/-re | házra | onto the house |
Superessive case | on/upon (static position) | -n/-on/-en/-ön | házon | on top of the house |
Delative case | from (movement away from a thing) | -ról/-röl | házról | from on top of the house, about the house |
Temporal case | at (used to indicate time or moment) | -kor | kettőkor | at two (o'clock) |
Sociative case | with (archaic) | -stul/-stül | házastul | with the house |
Locative case | in | -ban/-ben | házban | in the house, inside the house |
Types of | types or variants of a thing | -féle | kettőféle ház | two types of houses |
An example of a Russian case inflection is given below (with explicit stress marks), using the singular forms of the Russian term for "sailor", which belongs to Russian's first declension class.
Up to ten additional cases are identified by linguists, although today all of them are either incomplete (do not apply to all nouns or do not form full word paradigm with all combinations of gender and number) or degenerate (appear identical to one of the main six cases). The most recognized additional cases are locative (в лесу́, на мосту́, в слеза́х), partitive (ча́ю, са́хару, песку́), and two forms of vocative — old (Го́споди, Бо́же, о́тче) and neo-vocative (Маш, пап, ребя́т). Sometimes, so called count-form (for some countable nouns after numerals) is considered to be a sub-case.
Grammatical case was analyzed extensively in Sanskrit. The grammarian Pāṇini identified six semantic roles or kāraka, [33] which are related to the following eight Sanskrit cases in order: [34]
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¹ Vedic |
For example, in the following sentence leaf is the agent (kartā, nominative case), tree is the source (apādāna, ablative case), and ground is the locus (adhikaraṇa, locative case). The declensions are reflected in the morphemes -āt, -am, and -au respectively.
vṛkṣ-āt
from the tree
parṇ-am
a leaf
bhūm-au
on the ground
patati
falls
However, the cases may be deployed for other than the default thematic roles. A notable example is the passive construction. In the following sentence, Devadatta is the kartā, but appears in the instrumental case, and rice, the karman, object, is in the nominative case (as subject of the verb). The declensions are reflected in the morphemes -ena and -am.
devadatt-ena
by Devadatta
odan-am
the rice
pacyate
is cooked
The Tamil case system is analyzed in native and missionary grammars as consisting of a finite number of cases. [35] [36] The usual treatment of Tamil case (Arden 1942) [37] is one in which there are seven cases: nominative (first case), accusative (second case), instrumental (third), dative (fourth), ablative (fifth), genitive (sixth), and locative (seventh). In traditional analyses, there is always a clear distinction made between post-positional morphemes and case endings. The vocative is sometimes given a place in the case system as an eighth case, but vocative forms do not participate in usual morphophonemic alternations and do not govern the use of any postpositions. Modern grammarians, however, argue that this eight-case classification is coarse and artificial [36] and that Tamil usage is best understood if each suffix or combination of suffixes is seen as marking a separate case. [38]
Case | Suffixes | Example: மன்னன் (mannan) [king] | ||
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First case | Nominative | — |
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Second case | Accusative |
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Third case | Instrumental |
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Fourth case | Dative |
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Fifth case | Ablative |
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Sixth case | Genitive |
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Seventh case | Locative |
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Eighth case | Vocative |
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Modern Turkish has six cases (In Turkish İsmin Hâlleri).
Nominative What? Who? | Accusative [b] What? Who? | Dative [c] [d] [e] To whom? | Locative [f] [g] Where? Whom? | Ablative [h] [i] Where from? From whom? Why? | Genitive Whose? What's wrong? | |
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Singular | çiçek / (a/the) flower (nom) | çiçeği / (a/the) flower (acc) | çiçeğe / to (a/the) flower | çiçekte / in (a/the) flower | çiçekten / from (a/the) flower | çiçeğin / of (a/the) flower |
Plural | çiçekler / (the) flowers (nom) | çiçekleri / (the) flowers (acc) | çiçeklere / to (the) flowers | çiçeklerde / in (the) flowers | çiçeklerden / from (the) flowers | çiçeklerin / of (the) flowers |
The accusative can exist only in the noun(whether it is derived from a verb or not). For example, "Arkadaşlar bize gelmeyi düşünüyorlar." (Friends are thinking of coming to us).
The dative can exist only in the noun (whether it is derived from a verb or not). For example, "Bol bol kitap okumaya çalışıyorum." (I try to read a lot of books). [39]
As languages evolve, case systems change. In early Ancient Greek, for example, the genitive and ablative cases of given names became combined, giving five cases, rather than the six retained in Latin. In modern Hindi, the cases have been reduced to three: a direct case (for subjects and direct objects) and oblique case, and a vocative case. [40] [41] In English, apart from the pronouns discussed above, case has vanished altogether except for the possessive/non-possessive dichotomy in nouns.
The evolution of the treatment of case relationships can be circular. [5] : pp.167–174 Postpositions can become unstressed and sound like they are an unstressed syllable of a neighboring word. A postposition can thus merge into the stem of a head noun, developing various forms depending on the phonological shape of the stem. Affixes are subject to various phonological processes such as assimilation, vowel centering to the schwa, phoneme loss, and fusion, and these processes can reduce or even eliminate the distinctions between cases. Languages can then compensate for the resulting loss of function by creating postpositions, thus coming full circle.
Recent experiments in agent-based modeling have shown how case systems can emerge and evolve in a population of language users. [42] The experiments demonstrate that language users may introduce new case markers to reduce the cognitive effort required for semantic interpretation, hence facilitating communication through language. Case markers then become generalized through analogical reasoning and reuse.
Languages are categorized into several case systems, based on their morphosyntactic alignment—how they group verb agents and patients into cases:
The following are systems that some languages use to mark case instead of, or in addition to, declension:
The lemma form of words, which is the form chosen by convention as the canonical form of a word, is usually the most unmarked or basic case, which is typically the nominative, trigger, or absolutive case, whichever a language may have.
In grammar, the accusative case of a noun is the grammatical case used to receive the direct object of a transitive verb.
In linguistics, declension is the changing of the form of a word, generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence, by way of some inflection. Declensions may apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and determiners to indicate number, case, gender, and a number of other grammatical categories. Meanwhile, the inflectional change of verbs is called conjugation.
Latin declension is the set of patterns according to which Latin words are declined—that is, have their endings altered to show grammatical case, number and gender. Nouns, pronouns, and adjectives are declined, and a given pattern is called a declension. There are five declensions, which are numbered and grouped by ending and grammatical gender. Each noun follows one of the five declensions, but some irregular nouns have exceptions.
Latin is a heavily inflected language with largely free word order. Nouns are inflected for number and case; pronouns and adjectives are inflected for number, case, and gender; and verbs are inflected for person, number, tense, aspect, voice, and mood. The inflections are often changes in the ending of a word, but can be more complicated, especially with verbs.
Case roles, according to the work by Charles J. Fillmore (1967), are the semantic roles of noun phrases (NP) in relation to the syntactic structures that contain these noun phrases. The term case role is most widely used for purely semantic relations, including theta roles and thematic roles, that can be independent of the morpho-syntax. The concept of case roles is related to the larger notion of Case, which is defined as a system of marking dependent nouns for the type of semantic or syntactic relationship they bear to their heads. Case traditionally refers to inflectional marking.
In grammar, an oblique or objective case is a nominal case other than the nominative case and, sometimes, the vocative.
Russian grammar employs an Indo-European inflexional structure, with considerable adaptation.
Standard Romanian shares largely the same grammar and most of the vocabulary and phonological processes with the other three surviving varieties of Eastern Romance, namely Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian, and Istro-Romanian.
The grammar of the Polish language is complex and characterized by a high degree of inflection, and has relatively free word order, although the dominant arrangement is subject–verb–object (SVO). There commonly are no articles, and there is frequent dropping of subject pronouns. Distinctive features include the different treatment of masculine personal nouns in the plural, and the complex grammar of numerals and quantifiers.
Hindustani, the lingua franca of Northern India and Pakistan, has two standardised registers: Hindi and Urdu. Grammatical differences between the two standards are minor but each uses its own script: Hindi uses Devanagari while Urdu uses an extended form of the Perso-Arabic script, typically in the Nastaʿlīq style.
The Dutch language in its modern form does not have grammatical cases, and nouns only have singular and plural forms. Many remnants of former case declensions remain in the Dutch language, but few of them are productive. One exception is the genitive case, which is still productive to a certain extent. Although in the spoken language the case system was probably in a state of collapse as early as the 16th century, cases were still prescribed in the written standard up to 1946/1947. This article describes the system in use until then. For a full description of modern Dutch grammar, see Dutch grammar. See also History of Dutch orthography.
In the Latvian language, nouns, adjectives, pronouns and numerals are inflected in six declensions. There are seven cases:
The grammar of the Marathi language shares similarities with other modern Indo-Aryan languages such as Odia, Gujarati or Punjabi. The first modern book exclusively about the grammar of Marathi was printed in 1805 by Willam Carey.
Gothic is an inflected language, and as such its nouns, pronouns, and adjectives must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is called a declension. There are five grammatical cases in Gothic with a few traces of an old sixth instrumental case.
In linguistic morphology, inflection is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, and definiteness. The inflection of verbs is called conjugation, while the inflection of nouns, adjectives, adverbs, etc. can be called declension.
Old Norse has three categories of verbs and two categories of nouns. Conjugation and declension are carried out by a mix of inflection and two nonconcatenative morphological processes: umlaut, a backness-based alteration to the root vowel; and ablaut, a replacement of the root vowel, in verbs.
The grammar of the Hittite language has a highly conservative verbal system and rich nominal declension. The language is attested in cuneiform, and is the earliest attested Indo-European language.
This article concerns the morphology of the Albanian language, including the declension of nouns and adjectives, and the conjugation of verbs. It refers to the Tosk-based Albanian standard regulated by the Academy of Sciences of Albania.
This article describes the grammar of the Old Irish language. The grammar of the language has been described with exhaustive detail by various authors, including Thurneysen, Binchy and Bergin, McCone, O'Connell, Stifter, among many others.
The personal pronouns and possessives in Modern Standard Hindi of the Hindustani language display a higher degree of inflection than other parts of speech. Personal pronouns have distinct forms according to whether they stand for a subject (nominative), a direct object (accusative), an indirect object (dative), or a reflexive object. Pronouns further have special forms used with postpositions.
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In speech the genitive is signalled in singular nouns by an inflection that has the same pronunciation variants as for plural nouns in the common case
In writing, the inflection of regular nouns is realized in the singular by apostrophe + s (boy's), and in the regular plural by the apostrophe following the plural s (boys')
We conclude that both head and phrasal genitives involve case inflection. With head genitives it is always a noun that inflects, while the phrasal genitive can apply to words of most classes.