- In grammar, the
nominative case (abbreviated NOM),
subjective case,
straight case, or
upright case is one of the
grammatical cases of a noun or
other part...
- In
linguistic typology,
nominative–accusative
alignment is a type of
morphosyntactic alignment in
which subjects of
intransitive verbs are
treated like...
-
Nominative use, also "
nominative fair use", is a
legal doctrine that
provides an
affirmative defense to
trademark infringement as
enunciated by the United...
-
Nominative determinism is the
hypothesis that
people tend to
gravitate towards areas of work or
interest that fit
their names. The term was
first used...
- In
English grammar, a
nominative absolute is an absolute, the term
coming from
Latin absolūtum for "loosened from" or "separated", part of a sentence,...
- typology,
marked nominative alignment is an
unusual type of
morphosyntactic alignment similar to, and
often considered a
subtype of, a
nominative–accusative...
- the
nominative pronouns I/they
represent the perceiver, and the
accusative pronouns me/them
represent the
phenomenon perceived. Here,
nominative and accusative...
-
languages (English, Spanish, etc.) the
vocative case has been
absorbed by the
nominative, but
others still distinguish it,
including the
Baltic languages, some...
- with a
vocal in
nominative)
identical in form to
nominative. However,
there are
multiple strategies to form
genitives from
nominative forms ending in...
-
function in a sentence,
their form
changes to one of the five
cases (
nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, or dative). The set of
forms that a noun...