Terminative case

The Terminativ is a local case. It refers to the movement to a destination ( terminus).

In Sumerian

In the Sumerology the term has naturalized for a case, which often indicates the direction to a destination.

Example:

In Finno-Ugric

The Terminativ also occurs in some Finno- Ugric languages. It can be played in English with the preposition to.

In Hungarian

In Hungarian, the Terminativ ends in- ig; eg házig " to the house ".

The suffix -ig also expresses a temporal scheduling; eg Keddig " until Tuesday ."

Note that this suffix can not be used with personal pronouns ( "to me ").

Demonstrative get a dd: ez ig → eddig and az ig → addig. The associated question word ( "to where?" Or " until when? " ) Is meddig.

In Estonian

In Estonian the Terminativ on -ni or in the plural on - teni or deni - ends; eg piirini " to the limit ", Majani " to the house ", majadeni " to the houses ."

In Mongolian languages

In Kalmyk the Terminativ received with the ending -CA or CE; eg χōlāčā " up to his neck ." He comes today only rarely.

In Tibetan,

In Tibetan, the Terminativ belongs to 8-membered case system. It has the following endings: -ru, -su, -tu, -du, -r.

  • Grammatical case
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