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Showing results for nominative case. Search instead for Dative+Case.

nominative case

Cultural  
  1. The grammatical term indicating that a noun or pronoun is the subject of a sentence or clause rather than its object. (See case and objective case.)


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

While she’s slurping coconut shrimp with her boyfriend, in a nice curry, she’d get a note from me explaining pronouns in the nominative case.

From Los Angeles Times • Aug. 24, 2016

Here are a few of them: The subject of a tensed verb must be in nominative case, such as I, he, she, and they.

From "The Sense of Style" by Steven Pinker

Write a sentence containing a noun and one containing a pronoun in each of the following uses of the nominative case: 1.

From Business English A Practice Book by Buhlig, Rose

I, ī, pron. the nominative case singular of the first personal pronoun: the word used by a speaker or writer in mentioning himself: the object of self-consciousness, the ego.

From Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 2 of 4: E-M) by Various

Verbs impersonal have no nominative case before them, as Tædet me Grammatices, I am weary of Grammar.

From The Comic Latin Grammar A new and facetious introduction to the Latin tongue by Leech, John

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