accusative

listen to the pronunciation of accusative
İngilizce - İngilizce
Applied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which the action or influence of a transitive verb has its limited influence. Other parts of speech, including secondary or predicate direct objects, will also influence a sentence’s construction. In German the case used for direct objects
Producing accusations; accusatory; accusatorial; a manner that reflects a finding of fault or blame

This hath been a very accusative age — Sir E. Dering.

The accusative case
{a} the fourth case used in grammar
serving as or indicating the object of a verb or of certain prepositions and used for certain other purposes; "objective case"; "accusative endings"
the category of nouns serving as the direct object of a verb
The grammatical case which expresses the destination of the action signified by a verb
OE case form of direct objects
(The) Calvin was so called by his college companions We speak of an "accusative age," meaning searching, one eliminating error by accusing it "This hath been a very accusative age " - Sir E Dering Ace (1 syl ) The unit of cards or dice, from as, the Latin unit of weight (Italian, asso; French and Spanish, as )
containing or expressing accusation; "an accusitive forefinger"; "black accusatory looks"; "accusive shoes and telltale trousers"- O Henry; "his accusing glare"
: Applied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which the action or influence of a transitive verb has its limited influence. Other parts of speech, including secondary or predicate direct objects, will also influence a sentence's construction. In German the case used for direct objects
{i} case which marks the direct object of a verb (Grammar)
In the grammar of some languages, the accusative, or the accusative case, is the case used for a noun when it is the direct object of a verb, or the object of some prepositions. In English, only the pronouns `me', `him', `her', `us', and `them' are in the accusative. Compare nominative. a form of a noun in languages such as Latin or German, which shows that the noun is the direct object of a verb or a preposition
Applied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which the action or influence of a transitive verb terminates, or the immediate object of motion or tendency to, expressed by a preposition
Producing accusations; accusatory; a manner that reflects a finding of fault or blame
Producing accusations; accusatory
{s} of the case which marks the direct object of a verb (Grammar)
Henry; "his accusing glare
It corresponds to the objective case in English
the category of nouns serving as the direct object of a verb containing or expressing accusation; "an accusitive forefinger"; "black accusatory looks"; "accusive shoes and telltale trousers"- O
accusive
acc
accus
accusative case
: case used to mark the immediate object (direct object) on which the action or influence of a transitive verb has its limited influence

I play football.

accusative cases
plural form of accusative case
accusative-case
Attributive form of accusative case, noun

an accusative-case noun.

accusative case
case which indicates the direct object of a finite verb (Grammar)
accusative case
accusative: the category of nouns serving as the direct object of a verb
accusatively
In an accusative manner
genitive-accusative
The use of genitive as a case of the grammatical object; exists at least in several Slavic and Finnic languages

The paper deals with a long-standing problem of Slavic Historical Linguistics, which is the question why in the history of Old East Slavic (OESl) there occurred a substitution of the Adjective by the Genitive case of a noun as a means of expressing possession. The main postulate is that there existed a previously unnoticed connection between this substitution, on the one hand, and the rise of a new syncretic Accusative case form, known as Genitive-Accusative, on the other. It is suggested that the missing link underlying both processes is the intolerance of the language to Subject-Object ambiguity. The Rise of the Genitive-Accusative and Genitive of Possession in Old East Slavic, Elena Bratishenko, University of Calgary, 2007.

accusatively
blamingly, in an accusatory manner; relating to the case which marks the object of a verb (Grammar)
accusatively
In relation to the accusative case in grammar
accusatives
plural of accusative
accusative

    Heceleme

    ac·cu·sa·tive

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    ıkyuzıtîv

    Telaffuz

    /əˈkyo͞ozətəv/ /əˈkjuːzətɪv/

    Etimoloji

    () From French adjective accusatif, from Latin accusativus, from accusatus, perfect passive participle of accusare, + adjective suffix -ivus. See accuse.