Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dec 18, 2021 · The genitive case or genitive function, therefore, is a noun or pronoun’s inflected form that shows ownership, measurement, association, or source. In English, this is marked by the suffix ‘s and can also be indicated by an of phrase after a noun. The possessive determiners my, your, his, her (s), its, our, and their (s) are sometimes ...

  2. Sep 25, 2017 · Eines Tages does, in fact, mean roughly "of one day," which requires the genitive (not "generative" case). And that because it is a reference to one particular day. The idiomatic English expression is "once upon a time." You would use "ein (en) Tag" to refer to a "random," or unspecified day. "Ich brauche einen Tag nach Berlin zu fahren."

  3. Oct 30, 2013 · In short MonthNames are used in contexts where there is no day and GenitiveMonthNames are used in contexts where there is a day. The actual case may or may not be Genitive (it is so named because the first cases where this was important to distinguish did have a genitive case distinction).

  4. Your mother is wrong, genitive is correct. However currently there is a trend of simplification in German where genitive is being replaced by dative. It hasn't reached formal usage yet, but it might do so in time. People already start having trouble identifying proper formal usage, like your mother. For now you should still write "wegen der ...

  5. In my experience, it's not dead in spoken or colloquial German either. It's possibly even getting stronger. Genitive is dead in southern dialects, but since the usage of dialects in general is declining, especially due to urbanization and people moving from one part of the country to another, those same speakers start speaking more and more Standard German, including genitive.

  6. May 27, 2017 · In the imperial time the construction of personal nouns is the regular syntax. For thing nouns the accusative case lasts for more time but the genitive case strikes it during the imperial time. If memini means “mention” it is constructed with the genitive case (Caes. De bello civili 3, 108, 2 “eundem Achillam cuius supra meminimus”).

  7. Sep 18, 2019 · What is the genitive case? Which case should you use when speaking German? Brita is back to explain the differences between the genitive and dative cases.

  1. People also search for