Case (grammar)

grammatical category whose value reflects the grammatical function performed by a noun or pronoun in a phrase, clause, or sentence From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In grammar, case changes what a noun, adjective or pronoun does in a sentence. It is a set of forms which depend on the syntax (how the words go together). Case is an example of inflection, which is often an affix, a part of a word that is added to other words, that signals a grammatical relationship. Long ago, Old English used several cases, but Modern English does not normally use cases except for in pronouns.

History of case

In Latin, nouns pack several ideas into one word:

In many languages like Latin, German, Russian, Korean and Japanese, a noun's case changes the end of a word depending on the noun's role in the sentence. Nouns change their endings to show that they are doing something, something is done to them, they just happen to be there during the action, or they own something.

Therefore, word order in those languages is less important than in English in which word order often affects a sentence's meaning.

Modern English

In Modern English, case is not used much. Instead, word order and auxiliary verbs (helpers) are more important.

"The most important grammatical development [in English] was the establishment of a fixed pattern of word-order to express the relationship between clause elements".[1]p44

English has these cases for nouns and pronouns: common case and genitive (possessive).[1]p202 Each may take a plural:

  • Nouns: Girl; girls; girl's; girls'. The last three cannot be distinguished in speech except by the context.
  • Pronouns: This is your hat; this hat is yours. A few pronouns have three cases and four forms: I (subject), me (object), my (genitive before noun), mine (independent genitive).

English adjectives are unchanged: red hat, red hats.

References

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