「Genitive」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Genitive

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:58件

  • The genitive and comitative case suffixes follow the orina
  • The two two variants of genitive are compounds.
  • rrespond to the ‘weak' nouns which made their Genitive by adding not -es but -an; in which case the
  • in: genitive case
  • In English, the genitive case is represented analytically by the prepo
  • Later the genitive case of the name of the waterfall Sarpr (now
  • The first element is the genitive case of hafr m 'male goat'.
  • The first element is the genitive case of the name of the Norse god Ullr.
  • The first element is the genitive case of botn which means "the innermost part
  • The genitive case of other nouns of masculine or neuter ge
  • The first element is the genitive case of the river name Nauma (now Namsen) and
  • The first element is the genitive case of a river name Svorta and the last elem
  • The first element is the genitive case of elfr which means "river" (here the Gl
  • at at that time had already begun to lose the genitive case and the preterite).
  • The genitive case, which expresses possession, measurement
  • her manuscripts have no preposition, just the genitive case, normally interpreted as a genitive of s
  • xon had a larger selection of endings for the Genitive Case, but the one in -es (the original form o
  • beatae is a feminine proper name in the Latin genitive case.
  • rms, one for the dative case, and one for the genitive case.
  • sitions, most of them built on the dative and genitive cases.
  • nine cases: nominative, accusative, vocative, genitive, dative, instrumental, ablative, locative, an
  • rds can intervene between a base-word and its genitive determinant, and occasionally between the ele
  • at Uerb is probably the Pictish form of Ferb ( genitive Feirbe), a female name.
  • says, in 1659 ("anent" for "ament" and an his genitive for "Gamble's").
  • One genitive form requires that noun to precede the geniti
  • t element of the name, Ignatii-, is the Latin genitive form of Ignatius (e.g.
  • recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 in its genitive form of Wadesleia.
  • often associated with the Finnish word lempi ( genitive form lemmen), meaning "love".
  • hesis entitled "The coexistence of dative and genitive in the German language" and became officially
  • nductors sometimes announce the stop with the genitive inflection.
  • Palatine dialects have in common is that the genitive isn't used, same as the German imperfect exce
  • v sein Tod (literally ‘the dative is [to] the genitive its death') is a dialectal manner of saying D
  • The genitive Jesu is much more frequent than the other cas
  • son; it is found in Ogham inscriptions as the genitive maqui, maqqi, maqui (Sims-Williams 2003 pp.
  • e first element of the name, Salvii, is Latin genitive meaning Salvius' (e.g.
  • Up until the 18th century, a genitive noun was often used instead of a possessive p
  • The genitive of the personal pronoun is usually replaced b
  • eans "of a man" in Ancient Greek: ανερος, the genitive of "man", ανηρ.
  • There is neither a dative nor a genitive of the impersonal interrogative pronoun.
  • Eofes, therefore, would be the natural Genitive of a man's proper name, Eof.
  • um cover: "Der Wahrheit" (The truth; possibly genitive: Of the truth)
  • Aquarii is also the Latin genitive of Aquarius, and so refers to stars in the Aq
  • imil toponym comes from Crestimiri, i.e., the genitive of Crestimirus, probably the land owner from
  • dis, then renamed C. pylori (pylori being the genitive of pylorus) to correct a Latin grammar error.
  • "TI-MI-TO" element in "TI-MI-TO-A-KO" as the genitive of Greek 'themis' is problematical.
  • ative form for a word that occurs only in the genitive or dative cases, as Fortrenn and Fortrinn res
  • The placename Oxnam is from Old English oxa ( genitive oxan) "oxen" and ham "village", the meaning b
  • Its name derives from the Latin word palus ( genitive paludis) - a slough, mire or muddy place.
  • The genitive plural centi is produced in an old-fashioned
  • "moorland of the lambs" from the Old English genitive plural "lambra" ("lambs") and the noun "mor"
  • y of the students' benefactors ("Maecenatum," genitive plural of "Maecenas").
  • ly composed of two elements, on "good" plus a genitive plural ending and the suffix -zaro which in B
  • one correct way to form this epithet (in the genitive: Rec 60C.1.b.) and the resulting correct spel
  • oped into the family name Ahrends by adding a genitive s-ending, as in Ahrend's son.
  • In Old English, -es was the ending of the genitive singular of most strong declension nouns and
  • called Bracca", from the Old English Braccan ( genitive singular of a personal name) + heal, healh (a
  • d -s became more common as the ending for the genitive singular.
  • The abbreviation was "Arg" and the genitive was "Argus Navis".