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The four German noun cases - the accusative case.: masculine pronoun grammar point object accusative masculine article verb examples ... The Accusative Case...
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german.about.com/library/blcase_acc.htm
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Adjective endings for the accusative and dative cases in German (Part II). ... The following chart shows the adjective endings for the accusative and dative cases with the definite articles (der, dem, der) and the indefinite articles (einen, einem, einer, keinen). The nominative case endings were previously outlined in Part I.
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german.about.com/library/weekly/aa033098.htm
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Accusative case is the case in nominative-accusative languages that marks certain syntactic functions, usually direct objects . ... Concept module: accusative case...
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www.sil.org/linguistics/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatI...
www.sil.org/linguistics/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatIsAccusativeCase.htm
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Help with nominative-accusative case. Although I'm a native English speaker, I've often struggled to understand M. Caliban, The nominative Help with nominative-accusative case. ... The nominative and the accusative cases are the cases of the noun that is checked by the verb. Nominative case means that the noun is in the...
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www.englishforums.com/English/NominativeAccusativeCase/...
www.englishforums.com/English/NominativeAccusativeCase/dlmdc/post.htm
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The Accusative Case (der Akkusativ) ... The accusative case has several functions in German. It is marked in a variety of ways, with word order being the least important. The accusative personal pronouns are: ... There are accusative forms for other pronouns: man becomes einen, keiner becomes keinen, and wer becomes wen.
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www.dartmouth.edu/~german/Grammatik/Nouns/accusative.ht...
www.dartmouth.edu/~german/Grammatik/Nouns/accusative.html
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acc., accusative — A case that's usually used as the direct object of a verb. For example, if English had a fully productive case system, then ball in "The man threw the ball" would most likely be in the accusative.
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en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Glossary
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Try this activity to practice subject and direct object (or accusative case) rponouns ... Pop-ups: Choose the correct answer from a list of choices ... This activity was created by a Quia Web subscriber. Learn more about Quia...
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www.quia.com/pop/15423.html
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2. Cognate Accusative: an intransitive verb often takes the accusative of a noun of kindred meaning, or the accusative of a neuter pronoun or adjective of indefinite reference. ... 3. The Predicate Accusative refers to the same person or object as the direct object, but is not in apposition with it. This is found with verbs...
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www.class.uidaho.edu/luschnig/Latin%20Survey/accusative...
www.class.uidaho.edu/luschnig/Latin%20Survey/accusative.htm
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The accusative case in Latin shows which noun is direct object of the sentence. The direct object receives the action of the verb. In English, the direct object follows the verb. In Latin, the accusative case endings show which noun in the sentence is the direct object no matter where it is.
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ltntcha.tripod.com/accusative.htm
ltntcha.tripod.com/accusative.htm
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