Cases, Descriptions, and Examples

LFA XXIV

nominative

1.nominative as subject

The subject of a sentence is put in the nominative.

Cicero oratiōnem habuitCicero gave a speech

2.nominative as subject complement (predicate nominative)

The subject complement of a sentence with a linking verb is put in the nominative.

Quintus nōn erat stultusQuintus wasn’t stupid

genitive

3.possessive genitive

The genitive is used to indicate the owner (in a wide sense) of the noun it describes.

filius agricolaethe son of the farmer; the farmer’s son

dative

4.dative as indirect object

The indirect object of a verb is put in the dative case.

Marcus patrī donum dēditMarcus gave his father a gift

Marcus gave a gift to his father

accusative

5.accusative as direct object

The direct object of a verb is in the accusative.

pecuniam invēnērunt they found the money

equum puellae dēdithe gave the girl a horse

6.accusative of motion toward (place to which)

Motion toward (place to which) is expressed by the accusative case with the prepositions in‘into, against’, ad ‘toward’, per‘through’ or sub‘under’.

ad casam festinavithe hurried to the house

sub arborem cucurritshe ran under the tree

ablative

7.ablative with certain prepositions

Certain prepositions, such as cum ‘with’, prō ‘for’, and sine ‘without’ take the ablative.

prō patriā pugnaveruntthey fought for their fatherland

8.ablative of means or instrument

The ablative is used to express means or instrument; in other words, it answers the question ‘by what means?’. It is usually an object.

gladiīs pugnavēruntthey fought with swords

9.ablative of place where

Place where is expressed with the preposition in ‘in’ or sub‘under’ and the ablative.

in insulā habitantthey live on an island

Marcia sub arbore sedetMarcia is sitting under a tree

10.ablative of separation (place from which)

The ablative with the prepositionā or ab ‘from’, dē ‘down from’, ē or ex ‘out of’ is used to express separation.

deus dē caelō vēnitthe god came down from the sky

ē silvā cucurritshe ran out of the forest

vocative

11.vocative as direct address

A vocative is used for direct address. (A vocative looks the same as a nominative, with only two exceptions: a 2nd declension singular word ending in –us has a vocative ending in –e, and a 2nd declension singular word ending in -ius has a vocative ending in -ī.)

Anna, ambulā mēcum!Anna, walk with me!

MarceTullī, quid agis?Marcus Tullius, what are you doing?