释义 |
theformof anoun,pronoun, etc. in thegrammarof somelanguagesthatshowsthat thenoun,pronoun, etc. has orownssomething (有些语言中名词或代词的)属格,所有格SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrasesLinguistics: grammatical terms - ablative
- apposition
- appositive
- appositively
- attributively
- concord
- countable
- demonstrative
- feminine
- intensifier
- nominative
- particle
- predicatively
- premodifier
- regularity
- singular
- stative
- syntactic
- syntax
- uncountable
See more results » showingthat anoun,pronoun, etc. has orownssomething: - Someplacesin theBibletheGreekis genitivepluralandSabbathhas beentranslatedin thesingular.
- These are usuallyremnantsofcases, in thisinstance, the genitivecasewhich is still used inGerman.
- genitiveconstructionsinnounphrases, such as the man'sdog
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrasesLinguistics: grammatical terms - ablative
- apposition
- appositive
- appositively
- attributively
- concord
- countable
- demonstrative
- feminine
- intensifier
- nominative
- particle
- predicatively
- premodifier
- regularity
- singular
- stative
- syntactic
- syntax
- uncountable
See more results » (Definition ofgenitivefrom theCambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus© Cambridge University Press)theformof anoun,pronoun, etc. in thegrammarof somelanguagesthatshowsthat thenoun,pronoun, etc. has orownssomething (有些语言中名词或代词的)属格,所有格 Examplesofgenitivegenitive Such adnominal genitives had the determinative function and tended to be preposed.From theCambridge English Corpus Therefore, a noun phrase containing its head noun plus a postnominalgenitivenominal in fact consisted of two noun phrases.From theCambridge English Corpus These determiner genitives easily vary with corresponding noun modifiers in contexts where the whole construction is definite and specific.From theCambridge English Corpus Agenitivenominal, on the other hand, signals that the designated thing is not there as a participant of the event in question.From theCambridge English Corpus But it is only by rejecting the possibly left-dislocated examples that we can tell a coherent story about agreement of the separatedgenitive.From theCambridge English Corpus The separatedgenitivebecomes much more common at the end of the fourteenth century than it was earlier, and it is not restricted in register.From theCambridge English Corpus Thegenitivecase has three different markers, each restricted to a different subset of nouns, in both the singular and the plural.From theCambridge English Corpus Even more surprising is the fact acquisition of thegenitivesingular is virtually errorless.From theCambridge English Corpus Table 5 displays how thematicity of the possessor dovetails withgenitivevariation.From theCambridge English Corpus From this perspective, the use of thegenitivemarker is unusually high in this particular text.From theCambridge English Corpus If the subject refers to an inanimate entity affecting a human direct object, thegenitiveis obligatory for the direct object.From theCambridge English Corpus Most significant is the fact that, as with the dative andgenitiveconstructions, these nominative objects appear (discourse-neutrally) only in preverbal position.From theCambridge English Corpus The to-infinitive was not nominal because it assigned accusative (nevergenitive) case to its complements (250).From theCambridge English Corpus If the nominalization's verb is neither intransitive nor is the nominalization passive, then thegenitivecould correspond to either the subject or object.From theCambridge English Corpus As a further similar case, consider next the complementation of verbs which normally require their complement to appear in thegenitive.From theCambridge English Corpus These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. #https://dictionary.cambridge.org//dictionary/english/genitive## |