Accusative - Definition and Overview
The term
accusative
may be used in the following contexts:
A form of
morphosyntactic alignment
, as found in
nominative-accusative languages
.
The
accusative case
, which is a
grammatical case
found in nominative-accusative languages that employ explicit
morphology
to mark
direct objects
, such as
Latin
.
This is a
disambiguation
page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
Example Usage of Accusative
SlowWolf: @Syrana THEN WHY ARE YOU CHECKING IN WITH HIM!? *
Accusative
finger*
http://objection.mrdictionary.net/go.php?n=3425387
teenyjumper: Coffee pot for one. If anyone can explain to me
Accusative
and nominative case, I will bake you cookies.
lmyeoh: @wmyeoh As if you wouldn't know the difference between the
Accusative
and nominative cases of the relative pronoun "who". Che!
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