Accusative case

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The accusative case of a noun is the grammatical case used to mark the direct object of a verb. The same case is used in many languages for the objects of (some or all) prepositions.

The accusative case exists (or existed once) in all the Indo-European languages (including Latin, Sanskrit, Greek, German, Russian), in the Finno-Ugric languages, and in Semitic languages (such as Arabic). It should be noted that Balto-Fennic languages such as Finnish and Estonian have two cases to mark objects, the accusative and the partitive case. In morphosyntactic alignment terms, both perform the accusative function, but the accusative object is telic, while the partitive is not.

Modern English, which lacks declension in its nouns, still has an explicitly marked accusative case in a few pronouns as a remnant of Old English, an earlier declined form of the language. "Whom" is the accusative case of "who"; "him" is the accusative case of "he" (the final "m" of both of these words can be traced back to the Proto-Indo-European accusative case suffix); and "her" is the accusative case of "she". These words also serve as the dative case pronouns in English and could arguably be classified in the oblique case instead. Most modern English grammarians feel that due to the lack of declension except in a few pronouns, where accusative and dative have been merged, that making case distinctions in English is no longer relevant, and frequently employ the term "objective case" instead (see Declension in English).

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Example

In the sentence I see the car, the noun phrase the car is the direct object of the verb "see". In English, which has mostly lost the case system, the definite article and noun — "the car" — remain in the same form regardless of the grammatical role played by the words. One can correctly use "the car" as the subject of a sentence also: "The car is parked here."

In a declined language, the morphology of the article and/or noun changes in some way according to the grammatical role played by the noun in a given sentence. For example, in German, one possible translation of "the car" is der Wagen. This is the form in nominative case, used for the subject of a sentence. If this article/noun pair is used as the object of a verb, it (usually) changes to the accusative case, which entails an article shift in German — Ich sehe den Wagen. In German, masculine nouns change their definite article from der to den in accusative case.

See also Morphosyntactic alignment.

The case in Latin

The Accusative case (Accusativus) can also mean direction (domum - homewards, Romam - "to Rome" with no preposition needed), time duration (multos annos - for many years, ducentos annos - for 200 years) and can be used with infinitive (Accusativus cum infinitivo), e.g. dico eum domi abesse - "I say he isn't at home", suspecto eam hoc legisse - "I suspect that she has read this" or Romani antiqui putabant Martem bella regere - "Ancient Romans thought that Mars directs the wars".

See also

External links

bg:Винителен падеж ca:Cas acusatiu cs:Akuzativ da:Akkusativ de:Akkusativ es:Caso acusativo eo:Akuzativo fr:Accusatif gl:Acusativo hr:Akuzativ is:Þolfall it:Accusativo nl:Accusatief ja:対格 no:Akkusativ nn:Akkusativ pl:Biernik ro:Cazul acuzativ sr:Акузатив fi:Akkusatiivi sv:Ackusativ zh:宾格