Refine this word faster
Nominative
"Nominative" in a Sentence (12 examples)
'That' has only the two cases, nominative and objective, and it does not inflect depending on the case.
The relative pronoun 'that' has two states, a nominative case and objective case, but there is no possessive case.
All prepositions take the nominative.
In Latin, there are six cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative, and vocative.
In the Basque language there is the case of the ergative nominative.
Russian has six cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, and prepositional.
The verb's subject is always in the nominative case.
In English there are only three cases, nominative, genitive, and objective, or accusative case.
Russian has six basic cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental and prepositional.
nominative fair use
Show 2 more sentences
A telling marker of the change in the reporter's status was the elimination of the nominative reports (that is, the citation of the reports by the reporter's name). The first state to use “state reports” rather than the nominative designation was Connecticut (1814). Many other states made this change in the middle of the 19th Century or began their official reports with state reports.
To Duchamp, an artist's nominative act—the declaration itself regardless of the object—was itself the art. He could choose anything indifferent to, or even in spite of, its aesthetic merits.
See also for "nominative"
Next best steps
Mini challenge
Unscramble this word: nominative