See also: Nominative Nominatively Predicate Nominal Nominally Nominate Nominee Nomination Nominalism Nominated Nominator Nominalization Nominalisation
1. Kids Definition of Nominative : being or belonging to the case of a noun or pronoun that is usually the subject of a verb “Mary” in “Mary sees Anne” is in the Nominative case.
Nominative, Noun
2. (in certain inflected languages, as Sanskrit, Latin, and Russian) noting a case having as its function the indication of the subject of a finite verb, as in Latin Nauta bonus est “The sailor is good,” with nauta “sailor” in the Nominative …
Noting, Nauta, Nominative
3. Having or bearing a person's name: Nominative shares
Name, Nominative
4. (-nə-tĭv) Grammar Of, relating to, or being the case of the subject of a finite verb (as I in I wrote the letter) and of words identified with the subject of a copula, such as a predicate Nominative (as children in These are his children).
Nominative
5. Having or relating to the case (= form) of a noun, pronoun, or adjective used to show that a word is the subject of a verb (Definition of Nominative from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © …
Noun, Nominative
6. Nŏm'ə-nā'tĭv The definition of Nominative is a position that is filled by someone being chosen, or something that has a person's name on it
No, Nominative, Name
7. An example of Nominative is the position of U.S
Nominative
8. Definition of Nominative in the Definitions.net dictionary
Nominative, Net
9. What does Nominative mean? Information and translations of Nominative in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.
Nominative
10. The Nominative case (also called the "subjective case") is the main case
Nominative
11. Any changes that occur in the other cases (called "the oblique cases") can be considered changes to the Nominative-case version
Nominative
12. So, the Nominative case is the baseline.
Nominative
13. Nominative case pronouns are often called Nominative pronouns or subjective pronouns
Nominative
14. When a noun or pronoun is used as the subject of a verb, the Nominative case is used
Noun, Nominative
15. The list of Nominative case pronouns includes: I, you, he, she, it, they and we
Nominative
16. : a construction in English consisting of a noun in the common case or a pronoun in the Nominative case joined with a predicate that does not include a finite verb and functioning usually as a sentence modifier but also sometimes capable of being construed as the modifier of a particular word in the sentence (as her head erect in “she walked along, her head erect” or he being absent in “he being absent, no …
Noun, Nominative, Not, No
17. Occasionally, certain co-occurrences are frequently manifested: Since German is a Nominative-accusative language, the Nominative mostly expresses subject functions, (4) while accusative expresses the (direct) object functions in transitive as well as in intransitive sentences.
Nominative
18. A Nominative pronoun takes the appropriate form to act as the subject in a sentence or clause
Nominative
19. In the grammar of some languages, the Nominative or the Nominative case is the case used for a noun when it is the subject of a verb.
Nominative, Noun
20. ‘It therefore cannot be further inflected as if it were a Nominative singular noun.’
Nominative, Noun
21. ‘It therefore cannot be further inflected as if it were a Nominative singular noun.’
Nominative, Noun
22. What does predicate Nominative mean? A predicate Nominative is a noun that completes a linking verb and renames the subject
Nominative, Noun
23. The root of the term, Nominative, means name
Nominative, Name
24. A predicate Nominative only exists after a linking verb
Nominative
25. Predicate Nominative A predicate Nominative (also called a predicate noun) is a word or group of words that completes a linking verb and renames the subject
Nominative, Noun
26. A predicate Nominative is always a noun or a pronoun
Nominative, Noun
27. Examples of Predicate Nominatives In the examples below, the linking verbs are in bold and the predicate Nominatives are shaded.
Nominatives
28. Nominative case is a type of grammatical case
Nominative
29. This depicts that the Nominative case has to do something with the noun
Nominative, Noun
30. When a pronoun or a noun is the subject of a verb in a given sentence, that particular noun/pronoun is referred to as Nominative case
Noun, Nominative
31. In English grammar, predicate Nominative is the traditional term for a noun, pronoun, or another nominal that follows a linking verb, which is usually a form of the verb "be."The contemporary term for a predicate Nominative is a subject complement.
Nominative, Noun, Nominal
32. Difference Between Nominative and Accusative Definition
Nominative
33. Nominative case is the case used for a noun or pronoun which is the subject of a verb.
Nominative, Noun
34. Subject and the subject complement of a verb are in the Nominative case.
Nominative
35. The Nominative case is the case for the subject of the sentence
Nominative
36. The subject is the person or thing about which the predicate makes a statement, and the name, "Nominative," means "pertaining to the person or thing designated." Thus, you could say "Mary fired Joe" and the subject would be "Mary," the person designated as the actor in the
Name, Nominative
37. Let’s have a look at the different forms of German possessive pronouns in the Nominative case
Nominative
38. Table: German possessive pronouns in the Nominative case
Nominative
39. Nominative (adj.) late 14c., nominatif, "pertaining to the grammatical case dealing with the subject of a verb," from Old French nominatif, from Latin nominativus "pertaining to naming, serving to name" (in casus nominativus), from nominat-, past-participle stem of nominare "to name, call by name, give a name to," from nomen "name" (see name (n.))
Nominative, Nominatif, Nominativus, Naming, Name, Nominat, Nominare, Nomen
40. As a noun, "the Nominative case" (1610s); "a
Noun, Nominative
41. The word 'Nominative' is from the Latin nomen 'name', because it is the form in which you name something in isolation: that is, it is the citation form or dictionary form
Nominative, Nomen, Name
42. Nominative adj adjective: Describes a noun or pronoun--for example, "a tall girl," "an interesting book," "a big house." (grammar: case) ( Grammaire ) au nominatif loc adj locution adjectivale : groupe de mots qui servent d'adjectif.
Nominative, Noun, Nominatif
43. Der nette Mann is a masculine noun phrase in the Nominative case, taking a strong declension on the determiner and a weak declension on the adjective as dictated by declension pattern #1
Nette, Noun, Nominative
44. A predicate Nominative is a noun that comes after a linking verb and has the same meaning or value as the subject of a …
Nominative, Noun
45. A Nominative noun is a word that is used as the subject of a sentence, which often comes at the beginning of that sentence
Nominative, Noun
46. A Nominative noun is typically followed by a verb or predicate that describes the action or condition of that subject in some
Nominative, Noun
47. Nominative determinism is the hypothesis that people tend to gravitate towards areas of work that fit their names
Nominative, Names
48. Cases Nominative, accusative, dative and genitive are all grammatical cases
Nominative
49. Here is what they look like in English: Nominative - subject e.g
Nominative
50. Here, I would be in the Nominative since it is I that was doing the verb (eating)
Nominative
51. Nominative - WordReference English dictionary, questions, discussion and forums
Nominative
52. Russian Nominative case cheatsheet
Nominative
53. The reason to know the Nominative case is so you can identify the subject of the sentence
Nominative
54. All dictionary forms are usually Nominative case
Nominative
55. The Nominative case is used for nouns that are the subject of a sentence – who or what is performing the action
Nominative, Nouns
56. Learn when to use nouns in the Nominative case in German grammar with Lingolia’s online lesson
Nouns, Nominative
57. How unique is the name Nominative? Out of 6,028,151 records in the U.S
Name, Nominative
58. Social Security Administration public data, the first name Nominative was not present
Name, Nominative, Not
59. Weird things about the name Nominative: The name spelled backwards is Evitanimon.
Name, Nominative
60. The Nominative case is the basic form of articles, adjectives, nouns, and pronouns
Nominative, Nouns
61. The subject of a sentence is always in the Nominative case
Nominative
62. Master articles, adjectives, nouns and pronouns in their basic form with Lingolia’s complete tables for the Nominative …
Nouns, Nominative
63. Nominative Case (think subject) A
Nominative
64. Used as the predicate Nominative The captain is he
Nominative
65. (He is the captain.) The speaker is she.(She is the speaker.) Hint: The predicate Nominative completes the meaning of a linking verb.
Nominative
66. The Nominative case is used when the pronoun is the subject or object of the preposition
Nominative
67. Nominative translation in English-Latin dictionary
Nominative
68. The Nominative case in Russian—именительный падеж (imeNEEtelny paDYEZH)—is the basic case and serves to identify the subject of a verb
Nominative
69. All nouns and pronouns in Russian dictionaries are given in the Nominative case
Nouns, Nominative
NOMINATIVE [ˈnäm(ə)nədiv]
Definition of nominative. 1a : marking typically the subject of a verb especially in languages that have relatively full inflection nominative case. b : of or relating to the nominative case a nominative ending.
Nominative determinism Nominative determinism is the hypothesis that people tend to gravitate towards areas of work that fit their names. Nominative determinism is the hypothesis that people tend to gravitate towards areas of work that fit their names. The term was first used in the magazine New Scientist in 1994, after the magazine's humorous Feedback column noted several studies carried out by researchers with remarkably fitting surnames.
Examples:
Check out these examples of nominative pronouns acting as the subject of a sentence: