genitive

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A word inflected in the genitive case; a word indicating origin, ownership or possession
The genitive case; the inflection pattern (of any given language) that expresses origin or ownership and possession
Of or pertaining to that case (as the second case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses origin or possession. It corresponds to the possessive case in English
indicating source, origin, possession, or the like
{a} the second case of nouns
It corresponds to the possessive case in English
{s} of or pertaining to the possessive case (Grammar)
In the grammar of some languages, the genitive, or the genitive case, is a noun case which is used mainly to show possession. In English grammar, a noun or name with 's added to it, for example `dog's' or `Anne's', is sometimes called the genitive form. a form of a noun in some languages which shows a relationship of possession or origin between one thing and another (genitivus , from gignere; GENITAL)
The genitive case
Of or pertaining to that case (as the second case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses source or possession
serving to express or indicate possession; "possessive pronouns"; "the genitive endings"
the case expressing ownership
{i} possessive case (Grammar)
genit
genitive case
Noun case used to express some relationship such as possession or origin. It corresponds roughly to the English preposition "of."
genitive cases
plural form of genitive case
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.

genitive-case
Attributive form of genitive case, noun

a genitive-case noun.

genitive gender
showing possession (Grammar)
adverbial genitive
A noun declined in the genitive case that functions as an adverb
genitive.
gen
attributive genitive
a word in the genitive case used as an attributive adjective; "an example of the attributive genitive is `John's' in `John's mother'
double genitive
A phrasal construction in English in which possession is indicated by the word of followed by the possessive form of a noun or pronoun, as in a relative of mine or a friend of Pat's. Also called double possessive. See Usage Note at of
genitive

    Heceleme

    gen·i·tive

    Telaffuz

    Etimoloji

    () From Renaissance Latin casus genitīvus, literally "case pertaining to origin, birth", from genitus the perfect passive participle of gignō (“beget”).