「dative.」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

dative.

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:29件

  • euter; and four cases: nominative, accusative, dative and genitive.
  • is diploma thesis entitled "The coexistence of dative and genitive in the German language" and becam
  • erve as adpositions, most of them built on the dative and genitive cases.
  • , such as "in the Wachau," the article becomes dative and written as "in der Wachau."
  • older literature the bond is represented as a dative bond, as is currently used to depict an amine
  • convincing account of the significance of the dative bond.
  • His name, in the dative case (after "von"), may be rendered as "Rathen
  • e -gendi and the -li: the -gendi tends to mark dative case whereas the -li marks locative case in ge
  • d simply with the name Intarabo (again, in the dative case) was found at Dalheim.
  • to endow a church at a place called Heantune ( dative case).
  • rman has two special gerund forms, one for the dative case, and one for the genitive case.
  • The form Unaussprechlichen Kulten is the dative case, suggesting a full title of Von unausspre
  • for a word that occurs only in the genitive or dative cases, as Fortrenn and Fortrinn respectively.
  • cluishes "ears" (Gaelic cluasan or cluais, a dative form of cluas "ear")
  • s-de-Haute-Provence in southern France (in the dative form Αλα[υ]νειουι) and in Mannheim in western
  • The old dative forms of the personal pronouns became the obje
  • s: nominative, accusative, vocative, genitive, dative, instrumental, ablative, locative, and possibl
  • Dativ ist dem Genitiv sein Tod (literally ‘the dative is [to] the genitive its death') is a dialecta
  • Some of the main ones are: i "to" ( dative), n "of", d̠eg/d̠i/eg/i "in(to)", seg/zeg-/si
  • There is neither a dative nor a genitive of the impersonal interrogative
  • es generally be in the allative, rarely in the dative or in the "e-case".
  • e is nominative and the other is accusative or dative or something?
  • depending on whether the S-N bond is viewed as dative or not.
  • ny individuals and organizations have seen the dative phrase and have irresponsibly and unknowingly
  • Coven derives from the Anglo-Saxon cofum, the dative plural of cofa, which means either 'a cove' or
  • They both contain declensed forms identical to dative, plus additional elements.
  • the same Old English language word burh (whose dative singular and nominative/accusative plural form
  • n, very often in the plural forms Suleviae or ( dative) Sule(v)is.
  • One, at Lancaster, was dedicated (in the dative) to Deo Ialono Contre Sanctissimo ("to the hol