কর্তৃকারক, কর্তৃপদ
কর্তৃকারকীয়
(1) Serving as or indicating the subject of a verb and words identified with the subject of a copular verb,named,bearing the name of a specific person,appointed by nomination
(2) Serving as or indicating the subject of a verb and words identified with the subject of a copular verb
(3) Named
(4) Bearing the name of a specific person
(5) Appointed by nomination
(1) The category of nouns serving as the grammatical subject of a verb
(1) Early medieval Latin also allowed for the possibility of a dependent substantive clause with finite verb and subject in the nominative case.
(2) Other names on the sealing facets occur in either the nominative or the genitive.
(3) These would include the nominative (for the subject of a sentence), the accusative (for its object) and the genitive (to indicate possession).
(4) Grounding is marked by a cluster of features pertaining to the verb and its subject, namely tense inflection, number agreement of the verb with its subject, and the nominative case of the subject.
(5) It therefore cannot be further inflected as if it were a nominative singular noun.
(6) It's the nominative masculine plural definite article.
(7) The disadvantage is that the nominative singular and the nominative plural look the same and you can only distinguish by context.
(8) If u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510to boldly gou251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb is a split infinitive, then u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510the happy catu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb is a split nominative .
(9) This is true of nominatives of all nouns other than some third declension consonant stems.
nominated
subject case
nominative case
Oblique