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Nominative case
Nominative case
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In grammar, the nominative case (abbreviated NOM), subjective case, straight case, or upright case is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb, or (in Latin and formal variants of English) a predicative nominal or adjective, as opposed to its object, or other verb arguments. Generally, the noun "that is doing something" is in the nominative, and the nominative is often the form listed in dictionaries.

Etymology

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The English word nominative comes from Latin cāsus nominātīvus "case for naming",[1] which was translated from Ancient Greek ὀνομαστικὴ πτῶσις, onomastikḗ ptôsis "inflection for naming",[2] from onomázō "call by name",[3] from ónoma "name".[4] Dionysius Thrax in his The Art of Grammar refers to it as orthḗ or eutheîa "straight",[5] in contrast to the oblique or "bent" cases.

Characteristics

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The reference form (more technically, the least marked) of certain parts of speech is normally in the nominative case, but that is often not a complete specification of the reference form, as the number and the gender may need to be specified. Thus, the reference or least marked form of an adjective might be the nominative masculine singular.

The parts of speech that are often declined and therefore may have a nominative case are nouns, adjectives, pronouns and (less frequently) numerals and participles. The nominative case often indicates the subject of a verb but sometimes does not indicate any particular relationship with the other parts of a sentence. In some languages, the nominative case is unmarked, and it may then be said to be marked by a null morpheme. Moreover, in most languages with a nominative case, the nominative form is the lemma; that is, it is the reference form used to cite a word, to list it as a dictionary entry etc.

Nominative cases are found in Albanian, Arabic, Estonian, Sanskrit, Slovak, Ukrainian, Hungarian, Lithuanian, Georgian, German, Latin, Greek, Icelandic, Old English, Old French, Polish, Serbian, Czech, Romanian, Russian and Pashto, among other languages. English still retains some nominative pronouns, which are contrasted with the accusative (comparable to the oblique or disjunctive in some other languages): I (having the accusative me), we (having the accusative us), he (having the accusative him), she (having the accusative her), they (having the accusative them) and who (having the accusative whom). A usage that is archaic in most current English dialects is the singular second-person pronoun thou (accusative thee). A special case is the word you: originally, ye was its nominative form and you the accusative, but over time, you has come to be used for the nominative as well.

The term "nominative case" is most properly used in the discussion of nominative–accusative languages, such as Latin, Greek and most modern Western European languages.

In active–stative languages, there is a case, sometimes called nominative, that is the most marked case and is used for the subject of a transitive verb or a voluntary subject of an intransitive verb but not for an involuntary subject of an intransitive verb. Since such languages are a relatively new field of study, there is no standard name for this case.

Subjective case

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English is now often described as having a subjective case, instead of a nominative, to draw attention to the differences between the "standard" generic nominative and the way that it is used in English.[6][7][8][9][10] The term objective case is then used for the oblique case, which covers the roles of accusative, dative and objects of a preposition. The genitive case is then usually called the possessive form, rather than a noun case per se. English is then said to have two cases: the subjective and the objective.

Examples

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Subject

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The nominative case marks the subject of a verb. When the verb is active, the nominative is the person or thing doing the action (agent); when the verb is passive, the nominative is the person or thing receiving the action.

  • The boy saw her.
  • She was seen by the boy.

Predicate noun or adjective

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In copular sentences, the nominative is used for both subject and predicate.

  • Socrates was a wise man.
  • Socrates was wise.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The nominative case is a in that primarily marks the subject of a in a sentence, identifying the entity performing the action or serving as the topic of the statement. It derives its name from the Latin nomen, meaning "name," underscoring its function as the "naming case" for subjects and related elements like predicate nominatives. This case is fundamental in inflected languages, where morphological changes to nouns, pronouns, and adjectives indicate syntactic roles, though in analytic languages like , it is largely preserved only in forms such as I, he, or they. In many , the nominative case exhibits agreement in person, number, and sometimes gender with the , ensuring clarity in sentence structure even when varies. For instance, in Latin, it names the subject (e.g., Alfred in "Alfred is my name") and appears in predicate positions after linking verbs like sum ("to be"), as in Ille iuvenis filius est regis ("That youth is the son of the king"). Similarly, in German and Russian, nominative forms distinguish subjects from objects, with examples like English I see him (where I is nominative) contrasting with He sees me (he nominative). It also functions as an appositive to rename or clarify a preceding noun, often set off by commas, and dictionary entries typically list words in this base form. Historically, the nominative case was prominent in , an inflected Germanic language, where nouns, pronouns, and adjectives all inflected for it to maintain subject-predicate agreement, as in That great king ruled the kingdom. Over time, as English evolved toward analytic relying on fixed word order, overt nominative marking diminished for nouns, surviving mainly in pronouns and theoretical analyses of case relations. In classical languages like Latin, it accounts for about 15% of case usages and interacts with context for interpretation, highlighting its role beyond mere in conveying meaning. Contemporary linguistic theories, such as those in , further explore nominative case assignment by finite verbs (Tense heads) to subjects, influencing studies on finiteness and agreement across languages.

Fundamentals

Definition

The nominative case is a that primarily marks the subject of a finite verb, identifying the entity that performs or experiences the action described by the verb. In linguistic theory, it serves as the default syntactic position for agents or experiencers, enabling the to fulfill its core argument role within the . Key characteristics of the nominative case include its status as the unmarked form of nouns in many languages, often serving as the citation form in dictionaries and lexical entries. It aligns with subject-verb agreement in features such as , number, and , ensuring syntactic harmony between the subject and the predicate. This agreement mechanism reinforces the nominative's role in licensing the subject's prominence in sentence structure. In contrast to oblique cases like the accusative or dative, which mark direct objects or indirect objects and are governed by verbal or prepositional requirements, the nominative occupies the subject position without such dependencies. Oblique cases typically involve additional morphological marking to indicate their relational functions, whereas the nominative remains structurally independent as the clause's pivot. Within theoretical frameworks such as , the nominative case is considered prototypical in case theory, where it is checked by the finite inflectional head (Tense or Agr) in a specifier-head configuration. It plays a crucial role in theta-role assignment, particularly for agentive subjects, by facilitating the movement of arguments from their base-generated positions to the subject specifier, in accordance with principles like the Uniformity of Theta Assignment Hypothesis. This assignment ensures that theta-roles, such as agent, are structurally realized through nominative licensing.

Etymology

The term "nominative" derives from the Latin nominativus, meaning "pertaining to naming" or "for naming," which is formed from nomen ("name") and the -ativus indicating relation or tendency. This reflects the case's role in designating or identifying entities, akin to the English "," which traces back through to the same Latin root nomen. The Latin phrase cāsus nominātīvus ("nominative case") directly translates the ptôsis onomastikḗ ("naming case" or "case of names"), where onomastikḗ stems from ónoma ("name"), emphasizing the form used for direct . The terminology emerged in Greek grammatical tradition around the 2nd century BCE, with ptôsis onomastikḗ appearing in works by scholars like , and was adapted into by the 1st century BCE through influences such as Varro's De Lingua Latina. It gained standardization in late antique Latin via of Caesarea's Institutiones Grammaticae (c. 500 CE), a comprehensive 18-book that synthesized Greek and Roman grammatical concepts and became the authoritative text for case in Western . explicitly employed nominativus to describe the case form aligned with the subject's naming function, drawing on earlier Roman grammarians like Donatus while incorporating Hellenistic models. Through medieval , framework disseminated the term across Europe, influencing monastic schools and universities where served as the foundation for linguistics. By the , it integrated into modern , as seen in Jacob Grimm's Deutsche Grammatik (1819–1837), which applied Nominativ to analyze case systems in alongside Indo-European cognates, solidifying its place in contemporary linguistic terminology. The broader concept of "case" itself originates from Latin casus ("falling" or "event"), a of Greek ptôsis ("falling"), metaphorically denoting deviations from a base form, though this etymology pertains more to the category than specifically to the nominative.

Grammatical Functions

Subject Role

The nominative case primarily marks the subject of a , positioning it according to the language's basic . In subject-verb-object (SVO) languages such as English and French, the nominative subject canonically occupies the specifier position of the inflectional (Spec, IP) through movement from its base position, preceding the verb to satisfy case requirements. In subject-object-verb (SOV) languages like Dutch, the subject is base-generated external to the (VP) and typically appears clause-initially, though object placement can vary within the VP without displacing the subject. In verb-subject-object (VSO) languages such as Welsh, Irish, and , the nominative subject remains in its base position post-verb (governed by the inflectional head), resulting in verb-initial order; however, exceptions like subject-verb inversion occur in SVO variants of for emphasis or questions, where the subject moves pre-verbally. Nominative subjects trigger agreement in key phi-features, varying by language. In Icelandic, finite verbs agree with nominative subjects in and number, while adjectives and participles additionally agree in ; for instance, conjoined singular nominative subjects like "strákurinn og stúlkan" (the boy and the girl) elicit agreement in number (e.g., "eru" for "are") and neuter plural gender resolution for mixed or low-individuation controllers. In , nominative subjects in subject- (SV) order induce full agreement in , number, and (e.g., "al-ṭullāb-u katab-ū" [the students wrote-3PL.MASC]), but in -subject (VS) order, agreement is partial, omitting number (e.g., "kataba al-ṭullāb-u" [wrote-3SG.MASC the students]). Within clause structure, the nominative subject functions as the primary argument that controls verb inflection, serving as the agreement controller to determine the verb's phi-features. It also governs anaphora resolution, typically acting as the antecedent for ; for example, in subject-verb dependencies, resolution localizes at the matrix verb where agreement is checked, influencing subsequent pronoun reference to the subject. In theoretical terms, the nominative case aligns with intransitive subjects (S) in certain ergative-absolutive systems, particularly split-S configurations where unaccusative intransitives take nominative while unergatives take ergative, as in Georgian's . Split-ergativity further conditions this, with nominative-accusative patterns applying in imperfective aspects or with pronouns (e.g., in or ), contrasting absolutive marking for S and transitive objects in perfective transitive clauses.

Predicate Role

In , the predicate nominative serves as a type of subject complement in copular or constructions, where it follows a verb like "be" or "seem" and identifies, renames, or describes the subject, maintaining the nominative case to indicate equivalence or attribution. For instance, in the English sentence "She is a teacher," "a teacher" functions as the predicate nominative, equating the subject "she" with the role or identity described, a structure common in nominative-accusative languages where the complement aligns in case with the subject to preserve syntactic . This mechanic ensures that the predicate does not take the typically reserved for direct objects, as it does not receive the action but rather completes the subject's predication. Adjectival predicates in copular clauses also exhibit nominative case agreement with the subject, particularly in languages with rich inflectional morphology, where adjectives must match the subject's case, number, and gender to form a cohesive equative structure. In nominative-accusative systems such as Latin or German, this agreement rule assigns nominative case to the adjective following the copula, as seen in the Latin example "Puella pulchra est" ("The girl is beautiful"), where "pulchra" (beautiful) agrees in nominative case with "puella" (girl). This case assignment underscores the predicate's role in attributing a quality to the subject without implying agency or objecthood, differing from accusative complements in transitive clauses. A notable variation is the nominative of , which occurs when a in the nominative case renames or specifies the subject in predicate position, often for emphasis or clarification, as in "My friend, the doctor, is arriving soon," where "the doctor" apposes and renames "my friend" while sharing the nominative case. This construction is prevalent in but rare or absent in strict ergative systems, such as Basque or certain , where predicates may instead use absolutive case to align with intransitive subjects, avoiding nominative marking altogether. Syntactic tests distinguish predicate nominatives from direct objects by examining behaviors in transformations like raising or passivization; for example, in raising constructions such as "She seems a teacher," the predicate nominative raises with the subject without case alteration, whereas true objects cannot, as illustrated by the ungrammatical "*She seems to teach her." Passivization further differentiates them, since predicates do not promote to subject position under passivization, unlike objects in active transitive sentences, confirming their non-argument status.

Historical Development

Origins in Proto-Indo-European

In (), the was reconstructed as the unmarked form of nouns, serving as the baseline citation form without additional morphological marking for inanimate nouns, while animate nouns typically featured a characteristic *-s in the singular. For instance, the reconstructed nominative singular * '' illustrates this animate paradigm, where the *-s ending (often lost in zero-grade contexts) distinguished it from other cases. This reconstruction relies on the , analyzing regular sound correspondences across daughter languages to posit the ancestral forms. The nominative occupied a central position within PIE's eight-case system, which encompassed nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, ablative, , locative, and vocative, enabling precise encoding of through synthetic suffixes. Evidence for this system emerges from cognates in early attested languages: preserves the full paradigm (e.g., pitā́ 'father' nominative), shows parallel forms (e.g., patḗr), and Latin maintains similar patterns (e.g., pater), all traceable to PIE via shared innovations and archaisms. These comparisons, pioneered in the , confirm the nominative's role as the default case for core nominals. Functionally, the nominative in PIE is hypothesized to have primarily marked subjects of finite verbs, reflecting an early nominative-accusative alignment influenced by animacy hierarchies that prioritized agentive, animate entities for distinct marking. This system likely developed during the PIE speech community's timeframe, estimated at approximately 4500–2500 BCE in the Pontic-Caspian steppe region. Key scholarly reconstructions include August Schleicher's foundational work in the 1860s, which established systematic PIE morphology through comparative , and Julius Pokorny's 1959 , which updated and compiled thousands of nominative-rooted forms from Indo-European vocabularies.

Evolution in Modern Languages

In the centuries following the divergence of around 2000 BCE, the nominative case—originally marking subjects and predicates in —underwent varied transformations across its daughter branches, influenced by phonological shifts, contact with other languages, and syntactic innovations. By the early medieval period in (c. 500–1000 CE), erosion of case systems accelerated in emerging analytic languages, as fixed and prepositions increasingly replaced inflectional markers. In English and Romance languages, the nominative case largely disappeared from nouns and adjectives, transitioning these families toward analytic structures. Old English (c. 450–1150 CE) retained a four-case system including nominative, but by Middle English (c. 1150–1500 CE), following the Norman Conquest of 1066, phonological reductions like unstressed vowel weakening led to the merger of nominative with accusative and dative forms in nouns, leaving only traces in pronouns such as "I" versus "me." Similarly, Vulgar Latin's synthetic case system, with nominative distinct for subjects, collapsed rapidly by the 6th–8th centuries CE in Romance varieties due to prosodic shifts and analogy, resulting in modern languages like French and Spanish where nouns exhibit no case inflections; pronouns alone preserve nominative-accusative distinctions, as in Spanish yo (nominative) versus me. This medieval case erosion in Western Europe marked a broader shift from inflectional to analytic grammar, driven by language contact and syllable-final weakening. In contrast, Germanic and retained and simplified the nominative case within reduced systems. Modern German preserves four cases, with nominative marking subjects via distinct endings (e.g., der Hund in nominative), though mergers like accusative-neuter with nominative occurred post-500 BCE due to initial stress shifts eroding endings. , such as Russian and Polish, maintain six cases, including nominative for subjects, with the vocative often merging into nominative by Proto-Slavic times (c. 500–1000 CE) through sound changes and , preserving a robust inflectional framework compared to Western branches. The influence of revived nominative case usage in writings from the (c. 14th–17th centuries CE) onward, where scholars emulated Latin's full six-case system, including nominative inflections, to compose scientific and literary texts, as seen in works by and Newton. In constructed languages like , created in 1887, the nominative persists as the base form without ending, while a simplified accusative (-n) handles direct objects, reflecting classical inspiration but prioritizing ease over full complexity.

Comparative Usage

In Indo-European Languages

In the Germanic branch of , the nominative case is prominently retained, particularly for marking subjects and predicates, though the extent varies across languages. In German, nouns often take specific endings in the nominative singular, such as -e for certain masculine and neuter weak nouns (e.g., der Name, the name) or -er for strong masculine nouns in certain contexts (e.g., der Vater, ), while pronouns distinguish nominative from other cases, as in ich (I, nominative) versus mich (me, accusative/dative). Icelandic exemplifies fuller retention among Germanic languages, preserving four cases with distinct noun endings for nominative, such as -ur for masculine singular (e.g., maður, man) and -i for feminine singular (e.g., bók, ), alongside pronoun forms that align with subject roles. Examples in German illustrate nominative use for subjects and predicates:
  • Der Mann sieht den Hund. (The man sees the dog.) Here, der Mann is nominative as the subject, contrasting with accusative den Hund as the object.
  • Ich bin . (I am a student.) Ich serves as the nominative subject, and Student as the nominative predicate nominative agreeing with the copula.
  • Die Kinder spielen im Park. (The children play in the park.) Die Kinder is nominative as the subject.
In Icelandic, nominative marking supports subject and predicate functions with clear inflections:
  • Maðurinn les bók. (The man reads a book.) Maðurinn is nominative singular masculine as the subject.
  • Hann er maður. (He is a man.) Hann (he, nominative pronoun) is the subject, and maður the nominative predicate.
  • Bækur eru á borðinu. (Books are on the table.) Bækur is nominative plural as the subject.
In , the nominative case has largely eroded in nominal morphology, surviving vestigially in pronouns (e.g., French je, I, nominative, versus me, me, accusative/dative) and occasionally in adjectival agreement in dialects like certain Occitan varieties, where subjects trigger nominative-like forms. Nouns typically rely on and prepositions, but pronouns maintain case distinctions for subjects. French examples highlight nominative pronouns in subject and predicate roles:
  • Je mange une pomme. (I eat an apple.) Je is the nominative subject pronoun.
  • Il est professeur. (He is a professor.) Il (he, nominative) is the subject, with professeur as the predicate (unmarked but functioning nominatively).
  • Nous sommes fatigués. (We are tired.) Nous (we, nominative) is the plural subject.
The Slavic branch features robust case systems, with Russian exemplifying a six-case where the nominative distinctly marks and predicates, as seen in nouns like dom (, masculine nominative singular, unmarked form). and pronouns agree in nominative case with the noun they modify. Russian sentences demonstrate these uses:
  • Dom stoĭt na kholme. (The house stands on the hill.) Dom is nominative as the subject.
  • Bolʹshoĭ dom krasivyĭ. (The big house is beautiful.) Bolʹshoĭ dom is nominative subject with agreeing ; krasivyĭ is nominative predicate .
  • Dom i sad bolʹshie. (The house and garden are big.) Dom and sad are nominative in coordination.
In the Indic and Iranian branches, the nominative case shows varied retention. maintains a full eight-case system with distinct dual and nominative forms, such as -au for masculine dual (e.g., puruṣau, two men) and -aḥ for masculine (e.g., puruṣāḥ, men), used for subjects and predicates. Modern exhibits partial retention, primarily in pronouns with direct (nominative) forms like main (I) or ham (we), while nouns use unmarked direct forms for subjects, especially in non-past tenses; like Persian have largely lost inflectional cases, but pronouns retain some nominative distinctions. Sanskrit examples include:
  • Sa puruṣaḥ asti. (He is a man.) is nominative singular masculine as subject and predicate.
  • Puruṣau gacchataḥ. (The two men go.) Puruṣau is nominative dual as subject.
  • Puruṣāḥ vidyāṃ paṭhanti. (The men read knowledge.) Puruṣāḥ is nominative plural subject.
In , nominative appears in pronouns and direct noun forms:
  • Main khelta hoon. (I play.) Main is nominative first-person singular subject.
  • LaRkaa accha hai. (The boy is good.) LaRkaa is direct (nominative) masculine singular subject; accha is agreeing predicate adjective.
  • Ham likhte hain. (We write.) Ham is nominative first-person plural subject.

In Non-Indo-European Languages

In non-Indo-European languages, the concept of the is often applied analogically as an etic term to describe morphological or syntactic patterns that mark subjects of predicates, particularly in intransitive clauses or as the default form for core arguments, though these systems diverge significantly from Indo-European accusative alignments. In such as Finnish, the nominative serves as the unmarked basic form of nouns, functioning primarily to denote subjects of finite s and indicating or totality in contrast to the , which marks partiality or indefiniteness. For example, in the sentence Talo on iso ("The house is big"), talo appears in the nominative singular without ending, serving as the subject of the copular on ("is"). Another instance is Karhu söi kalan ("The ate the "), where karhu ("") is nominative as the subject, contrasting with partitive usage in negated or imperfective contexts like Karhu söi kalaa ("The was eating "), emphasizing partial action. A third example involves plural subjects: Sotilaat tuhosivat kaupungin ("The soldiers destroyed the city"), with sotilaat ("soldiers") in nominative plural marked by -t, highlighting the case's role in subject agreement without additional for ity beyond the stem. This nominative-partitive opposition underscores Finnish's aspectual and semantic sensitivities, where the nominative aligns with completed or definite events. Semitic languages like feature a nominative case termed marfūʿ ("raised"), realized through the iʿrāb system of desinential inflections using short s to indicate grammatical roles, with marfūʿ marking subjects of verbal and s via the vowel -u or -un for indefinite nouns. In Raʾā l-ṭālibu l-kitāba ("The saw the "), l-ṭālibu ("the student") ends in -u as marfūʿ, denoting the subject of the raʾā ("saw"). Similarly, in the L-ṭālibu mujtahidun ("The is diligent"), both l-ṭālibu (subject) and mujtahidun (predicate) bear the marfūʿ ending -un, illustrating its use for both elements in equational constructions. A further example is Jāʾa l-maliku ("The king came"), where l-maliku ("the king") is in marfūʿ as the intransitive subject, contrasting with accusative (manṣūb) or genitive (majrūr) forms in other syntactic positions; this inflectional system, while syntactically driven, carries debated semantic nuances in . Austronesian languages such as Tagalog employ a focus system, often analogized to nominative marking, where voice affixes promote the most prominent argument (typically the actor in actor voice) to syntactic pivot status, marked by the particle ang as the clause's nominative-like subject. In actor voice, affixes like um- or mag- elevate the actor: for instance, Bili ng kotse ang lalaki ("The man bought a car"), with ang lalaki ("the man") as the ang-marked pivot and ng kotse ("a/of car") as genitive under-goer. Another example is Tawa ang bata ("The child laughed"), where um- in actor voice marks ang bata ("the child") as the nominative subject of the , emphasizing the actor's prominence in event initiation. In Nag-luto ng pagkain ang lalaki ("The man cooked food"), mag- promotes ang lalaki ("the man") to pivot, with ng pagkain ("food") in genitive; this system prioritizes pragmatic topicality over rigid roles, allowing non-actors to focus in other voices but aligning actor voice with nominative subjecthood. In ergative languages like Basque, the absolutive case functions as a nominative equivalent for subjects of intransitive verbs, unmarked by -∅ and patterning with transitive objects, while the ergative -k marks transitive subjects, creating an absolutive-ergative alignment distinct from nominative-accusative systems. For example, in Gizon-a-∅ etorri da ("The man has arrived"), gizon-a-∅ ("the man") is absolutive as the intransitive subject, analogous to a nominative role. Similarly, Itziar-∅ joan da ("Itziar has gone") places Itziar-∅ in absolutive for the unaccusative verb joan ("go"), underscoring its subject-marking function without ergative contrast. A third case is Haurr-a-∅ lo egin du ("The child has slept"), with haurr-a-∅ ("the child") absolutive as subject of the unergative lo egin ("sleep"), though some verbs allow ergative alternation; this absolutive usage highlights cross-linguistic parallels in core argument default marking despite the ergative framework.

Morphological Marking

Syntactic Markers

In languages with fixed , such as English, the nominative case for subjects is primarily indicated by pre-verbal positioning, where the subject noun phrase typically precedes the verb as the default syntactic structure. For instance, in "The cat chased the mouse," the nominative "the cat" occupies the initial subject position, distinguishing it from the post-verbal accusative object. This cue relies on syntactic rigidity rather than morphological marking, ensuring the nominative role is identifiable through linear order alone. Agreement morphology provides another key syntactic marker, where verbs conjugate to match features of the nominative , such as person and number, in languages with rich inflectional systems. In Hungarian, an , finite verbs exhibit subject-verb agreement paradigms that reflect the nominative subject's φ-features, alongside additional definiteness-based conjugations for objects. For example, the verb "lát" (see) conjugates as "látok" for a first-person singular nominative subject in indefinite contexts ("Látok egy madarat" – I see a ) or "látom" in definite ones, tying the verbal affix directly to the nominative argument's properties. This mechanism reinforces the nominative's syntactic prominence by aligning verbal morphology with the subject's structural position. Cliticization serves as a syntactic marker in certain agglutinative languages, where reduced pronominal forms attach to verbs or to signal nominative subjects, often involving doubling with full phrases. In , an agglutinative Nilo-Saharan language, subject derived from (e.g., first-person singular -i from ai) to predicates to license nominative arguments, particularly in null-subject or topicalized constructions. For example, in "pes-s-n-a" (say-past-2/3sg-pred), the -n doubles a topicalized nominative subject like "apogg-il-lon" (skipper-top), marking its core role without full to the itself. This attachment highlights the nominative's syntactic integration into the verbal complex. Syntactic diagnostics, such as and coordination tests, further identify nominative phrases by assessing their constituency and mobility within the . involves fronting a to sentence-initial position, revealing nominative subjects' ability to undergo such movement while preserving ; for example, in English, "The book, I read yesterday" topicalizes the nominative subject without disrupting core relations. Coordination links potential nominative phrases with coordinators like "and," confirming their phrasal status: "The dog and the cat slept" coordinates two nominative subjects, demonstrating their parallel syntactic behavior. These tests isolate the nominative by probing structural equivalence and extractability, distinct from other arguments. In many inflected languages, the nominative case is morphologically marked on nouns, pronouns, and adjectives through specific suffixes or zero-marking. For example, in Latin, masculine nouns of the second declension end in -us in the nominative singular (e.g., dominus, "lord"), while feminine first-declension nouns end in -a (e.g., dea, "goddess"). In Germanic languages like German, nominative forms often coincide with unmarked or base forms, such as der Mann (the man). Zero-marking is common, as in Old Nubian where nominative is unmarked (-0), contrasting with other cases like genitive -n(a). These morphological indicators directly signal the nominative role on the noun phrase itself.

Semantic Variations

The nominative case, while primarily associated with subjects performing agentive or thematic roles in , exhibits semantic extensions in various languages where it assumes non-prototypical functions, such as expressing emphasis, direct address, or indefinite existence. These variations highlight how the case can transcend strict subjecthood to convey exclamatory, vocative, or existential meanings, often overlapping with other semantic domains. In Latin, the exclamatory nominative serves to emphasize emotional or rhetorical intensity, functioning independently of a through . For instance, the phrase O puer! ("O boy!") uses the nominative puer to invoke surprise or , implying an omitted verb like es ("you are"). This construction appears frequently in classical texts, such as Cicero's orations, where it heightens dramatic effect without altering the case's morphological form. Ancient Greek demonstrates significant overlap between the nominative and vocative cases, particularly for certain noun classes, allowing the nominative to double as a form of direct address. Neuter nouns and adjectives invariably employ their nominative singular and plural forms for vocative purposes, as in ὦ τέκνον ("O child!"), where τέκνον remains unchanged from the nominative. Similarly, feminine nouns of the first declension and all plurals use nominative forms, such as ὦ ἡμέρα ("O day!") or ἄνδρες Ἀθηναῖοι ("Men of Athens!"), often marked by the particle for politeness or formality. This syncretism reflects a historical merger, enabling the nominative to fulfill vocative semantics colloquially and in prose. In Russian, the nominative extends to generic or indefinite reference in existential constructions, marking the post-verbal element as an indefinite subject without implying a specific agent. The sentence Est' kniga ("There is a ") employs the nominative kniga to denote the of an indefinite , contrasting with more definite or negated contexts that may shift to genitive. This usage presupposes the entity's in a neutral, non-agentive role, common in impersonal sentences like Na stole est' kniga ("There is a on the table"), where the nominative underscores indefiniteness and existential assertion. In some ergative-absolutive languages, the absolutive case—analogous to the nominative in accusative systems—extends semantically to non-agentive roles, including experiencers and patients, unifying them under a single unmarked form. For transitive verbs, patients receive absolutive marking, as in Inuit languages where the object of "see" aligns with the subject of intransitive "sleep" in absolutive case. Intransitive experiencers, such as the subject of "fear" or "hurt," also take absolutive, treating them as patient-like despite their perceptual role, which contrasts with agentive subjects marked ergative. This alignment emphasizes affectedness over agency, with the absolutive functioning analogously to nominative in accusative systems by grouping less volitional semantic roles.

References

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