PPT-Accusative and Dative Cases
Author : lois-ondreau | Published Date : 2020-04-06
Personal Pronouns i ch mich mir d u dich dir e rsiees ihnsiees ihmihrihm w ir uns unser i hr
Presentation Embed Code
Download Presentation
Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document " Accusative and Dative Cases" is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this website for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.
Accusative and Dative Cases: Transcript
Personal Pronouns i ch mich mir d u dich dir e rsiees ihnsiees ihmihrihm w ir uns unser i hr . By: Harrison Jamin. What Is A Prepositional Phrase?. A prepositional phrase usually consists of a preposition and a noun(object).. So, the basic formula is: Preposition + object.. Example: In the house.. Adjective Ending in the Nominative Case. Look at this chart for definite & indefinite articles in the . nomiantive. case. (you may want to make a copy of this for your notes). . . For definite articles (the). of Quality::-w/ these: desire, knowledge, familiarity, memory, participation, power, fullnesswith Verbs:-Verbs that Take a Genitive: dative case = indirect object. Quintus serv. o. . pecuniam. . dedit. .. dat. acc.. Quintus gave money . to. the slave.. s. ervo is in the dative case. . pecuniam. , in the accusative, receives the action directly and is closer to the verb. servo receives the action indirectly and is farther away from the verb. . Who is benefiting?. Exempla. mercator. . feminae. . piratas. . ostendit. .. The merchant showed the pirates to the . woman. mercator. . feminīs. . sanguinem. . ostendit. .. The merchant showed the . Dative Case. Text pp. 59-64. Review: Genitive Case. The genitive case is used to show possession and is translated with “of.”. Casa . Marci. . est. magna.. The house . of Marcus . is big.. Cibus. Case. Singular. Plural. Nominative. ic. we. Accusative. me. us. Genitive. min. ure. Dative. me. us. Second Person. Case. Singular. Plural. Nominative. þu. ge. Accusative. þe. eow. Genitive. þin. eower. case of the indirect object. .. It is usually the . person/thing. you give . or do something . to. . . The man gives . the dog. the bone =. The man gives the bone . to the dog. .. In both cases, “the dog” would be expressed by a dative case in German. Gerundive . What is a gerundive?. Future passive participle. Functions as an adjective. When used with . ad. or . causa. it shows purpose. When used with . est. it shows obligation . It declines like a 1. Lesson 3:. Wow. This is trippy.. You already know more than 99.9% of Americans.. You know more about the secret of the German language than the president of the United States.. The Secret of the German Language. Latin nouns have . CASE, GENDER, NUMBER.. 1. . Case. – an ending that shows how the noun functions in the sentence . ex. Subject, direct object, possession…. 2. . Gender . – a way of categorizing nouns into 3 forms: masculine, feminine, neuter. an. Two way prepositions. What are two-way prepositions? . A . set . of prepositions can take the dative or the accusative case: . "an. ", "auf", "hinter", ". in. ", ". neben. ", ". über. ", ". unter. Direct Object. This is the thing that is directly affected by the action of the verb.. Feriebat. . Kylia. . Zenniam. . –Kylie was hitting . Zhenni. .. Hoc. . feci. . –I made . this. .. Jacobus. The Secret of the German Language Lesson 8: Today we have a special guest: That crazy German teacher that wrote all of these stories. That’s right: Das Gesicht von Wahnsinn ! We go back to a lesson we had when we first started learning German.
Download Document
Here is the link to download the presentation.
" Accusative and Dative Cases"The content belongs to its owner. You may download and print it for personal use, without modification, and keep all copyright notices. By downloading, you agree to these terms.
Related Documents