Difference between revisions of "Nominative Case (definition)"
From Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki
AndrewCarnie (talk | contribs) (→See Also) |
AndrewCarnie (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | ''for a definition of the general notion of '''case''' see [[Case (Definition)]] | + | *''for a definition of the general notion of '''case''' see [[Case (Definition)]] |
'''Nominative''' case is the form that a noun or pronoun takes when it is the [[Subject (definition)|subject]] of a verb. For example, the [[English]] [[Pronoun (definition)|pronoun]] takes the forms ''I, you, he, she, we, they'' when used as the subject of a verb as in "'''I''' saw John." In Scottish Gaelic there is never any difference between the nominative case and the [[Accusative Case (definition)|accusative]] case. For this reason the two cases are typically grouped together as a single case we can call the [[Common Case (definition)|common case]]. | '''Nominative''' case is the form that a noun or pronoun takes when it is the [[Subject (definition)|subject]] of a verb. For example, the [[English]] [[Pronoun (definition)|pronoun]] takes the forms ''I, you, he, she, we, they'' when used as the subject of a verb as in "'''I''' saw John." In Scottish Gaelic there is never any difference between the nominative case and the [[Accusative Case (definition)|accusative]] case. For this reason the two cases are typically grouped together as a single case we can call the [[Common Case (definition)|common case]]. | ||
− | + | ==See Also== | |
[[Genitive Case (definition)]] | [[Genitive Case (definition)]] | ||
− | + | ==External Links== | |
To see a more comprehensive discussion see the wikipedia.org page at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominative but be warned that pages on wikipedia are subject to misinformation and vandalism, so no guarantee of accuracy is guaranteed if you link away from this site. | To see a more comprehensive discussion see the wikipedia.org page at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominative but be warned that pages on wikipedia are subject to misinformation and vandalism, so no guarantee of accuracy is guaranteed if you link away from this site. | ||
− | |||
[[Category:Technical Definitions]] | [[Category:Technical Definitions]] |
Revision as of 22:13, 21 June 2009
- for a definition of the general notion of case see Case (Definition)
Nominative case is the form that a noun or pronoun takes when it is the subject of a verb. For example, the English pronoun takes the forms I, you, he, she, we, they when used as the subject of a verb as in "I saw John." In Scottish Gaelic there is never any difference between the nominative case and the accusative case. For this reason the two cases are typically grouped together as a single case we can call the common case.
See Also
External Links
To see a more comprehensive discussion see the wikipedia.org page at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominative but be warned that pages on wikipedia are subject to misinformation and vandalism, so no guarantee of accuracy is guaranteed if you link away from this site.