The nominative case (abbreviated nom) is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb or the predicate noun or predicate adjective, as opposed to its object or other verb arguments. (Generally, it is a noun that is doing something.)

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Sat Feb 6 08:25:21 2010

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Lingua Mongolia Uighur Script Mongolian Resources info linguamongolia co uk Grammar categories

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From Yahoo Image Search: "Nominative case"
Fri Nov 20 20:01:53 2009

Raminagrobis: Mensa, mensam, mensae
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Raminagrobis: Mensa, mensam, mensae

Raminagrobis

Sat, 28 Jun 2008 18:02:00 GM

I note also that the . case. order is . nominative. -genitive-dativ​e-accusative; the ablative seems to have gone missing in Alice's memory. This is the order by which I was taught in the U.S.; only as an adult did I discover that in many ...

Chapter 5: Summary and Conclusion By: Mario Cerda
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Chapter 5: Summary and Conclusion By: Mario Cerda

Jessica Ministery

ue, 17 Nov 2009 08:19:00 GM

However, given the tight parameters assigned to this investigation, more work remains to be done in the core case form, the . nominative case. . For example, the behavior of verbal ellipses with proper names and articular nouns is of ...

Mr. Saddletree
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Mr. Saddletree

facadet

Wed, 17 Feb 2010 14:49:02 GM

``Then, what the deevil d'ye take the . nominative. and the dative . cases. to be?'' said Butler, hastily, and surprised at once out of his decency of expression and accuracy of pronunciation. ``I'll tell you that at leisure, Mr. ...

From Google Blog Search: "Nominative case"
Tue Mar 9 18:13:46 2010

That? Who? Buck could care less - NewsOK.com
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That? Who? Buck could care less

NewsOK.com

It has one key advantage over "who or "whom : You don't have to parse the sentence to determine whether to use the objective or the nominative case . ...
Yeager v. Cingular Wireless LLC, et al. - Lexology (registration)
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Yeager v. Cingular Wireless LLC, et al.

Lexology (registration)

The court also rejected the defendant's argument that its use was a nominative fair use, stating that nominative fair use is a defense in a class of cases ...
An Irishman's Diary - Irish Times
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An Irishman's Diary

Irish Times

Yet the sceptics' campaign to have the case reopened is still considered by most traditionalists (or Stratfordians ) to be on a par with membership of the ...

From Google News Search: "Nominative case"
Fri Jan 15 05:29:37 2010

Which sentence uses all its nominative case pronouns correctly?
Q. A. The most dangerous animals are them. B. Have you seen how well Ricky and her dance together? C. The referee at tonight's game will be I. D. Eva and me are going in the same costumes.
Asked by emuhlee. - Thu Mar 26 15:18:50 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. A. they B. she C. me D. I
Answered by flischer - Thu Mar 26 15:57:33 2009

could someone explain the German case system?
Q. I've looked all around the internet but I just don't understand, nothing seems to explain in basic terms the case system. I'm clearly being stupid but could anyone explain the German case system, such as the accusative, nominative, genitive, dative. Could you also explain German prepositions? I dont know if this is the same thing or... :S help please much appreciated
Asked by jimquan - Mon Sep 8 16:16:13 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. that's always a tough one for me 2, i found this website a while ago and it really helped me hope this helps ^-^
Answered by Lauren G - Mon Sep 8 16:24:42 2008

Grammar [accusative nominative possessive .... ]?
Q. Hi all, I'm currently learning German, and I was hoping somebody could help with with some rather fundamental problems. Back to basics: Ever since leaving my schooling days behind, I've not had much need to think about my English grammar in terms of possessive pronouns, accusative, or nominative cases; until now! Rather embarrassingly I need a refresh course and I'm finding it difficult to locate a decent explanation on the net. What I need is an explanation of the following cases and an example of each [in English]: Accusative Nominative Possessive Possessive pronoun Personal pronoun Dative Conjunctive Imperative Infinitive Prepositions Model Verbs I know I'm asking a lot here, so I appreciate any help and thank you in… [cont.]
Asked by kissmyblarney - Thu Oct 9 02:05:11 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. aidanlei is correct. I'll add to what he identified: There are also prepositions of time: eg: at 6:00, on Monday, in January. (at, in, on are prepositions) Nominative: This is the case used for the subject of the sentence. eg: The book is on the table (Das Buch liegt auf dem Tisch). The book is the subject of the sentence and is in the nominative case. Accusative: This is used with nouns that function as the direct object. eg: Show the book to the teacher (Zeig das Buch dem Lehrer). The book is the direct object in this sentence and therefore is in the accusative case. Dative: a noun functions as an indirect object . Using the example from above, the teacher is in the dative case here. Modal verbs: show the way the subject is… [cont.]
Answered by winnie2 - Thu Oct 9 03:10:25 2008

From Yahoo Answer Search: "Nominative case"
Fri Nov 20 20:36:59 2009