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accusative
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The answer ACCUSATIVE has 21 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
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The word ACCUSATIVE is VALID in some board games. Check ACCUSATIVE in word games in Scrabble, Words With Friends, see scores, anagrams etc.
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Definitions of accusative in various dictionaries:
noun - the case of noun s serving as the direct object of a verb
adj - containing or expressing accusation
adj - serving as or indicating the object of a verb or of certain prepositions and used for certain other purposes
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Possible Dictionary Clues |
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(in Latin, Greek, German, and some other languages) denoting a case of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives which expresses the object of an action or the goal of motion. |
A word in the accusative case. |
the form of a noun, pronoun, or adjective that is used in some languages to show that the word is the direct object of a verb |
having or relating to the case ( form) of a noun, pronoun, or adjective that is used to show that a word is the direct object of a verb |
the category of nouns serving as the direct object of a verb |
containing or expressing accusation |
serving as or indicating the object of a verb or of certain prepositions and used for certain other purposes |
Of, relating to, or being the grammatical case that is the direct object of a verb or the object of certain prepositions. |
Accusatory. |
The accusative case. |
Accusative might refer to |
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The Accusative case (abbreviated acc) of a noun is the grammatical case used to mark the direct object of a transitive verb. The same case is used in many languages for the objects of (some or all) prepositions. It is a noun that is having something done to it, usually used together (such as in Latin) with the nominative case. For example, "they" in English is nominative; "them" is accusative. The sentence "They like them" shows the nominative case and accusative case working in conjunction using the same base word. The syntactic functions of the accusative consist of designating the immediate object of an action, the intended result, the goal of a motion, and the extent of an action.The accusative case existed in Proto-Indo-European and is present in some Indo-European languages (including Latin, Sanskrit, Greek, German, Icelandic, Bulgarian, Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croatian, Slovak, Romanian, Russian, Ukrainian), in the Uralic languages, in Altaic languages and in Semitic languages (su |