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Grammatical case
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== Case order == The traditional case order (nom-gen-dat-acc) was expressed for the first time in ''[[The Art of Grammar]]'' in the 2nd century BC: {{verse translation|[[s:el:Τέχνη Γραμματική|Πτώσεις ὀνομάτων εἰσὶ πέντε· ὀρθή, γενική, δοτική, αἰτιατική, κλητική.]]|There are five Cases, the right [nominative], the generic [genitive], the dative, the accusative, and the vocative.<ref>{{cite book |title=The grammar of Dionysios Thrax |translator=Tomas Davidson |location=St. Louis |publisher=Studley |year=1874 |page=10 |url=https://archive.org/stream/grammarofdionysi00dionuoft#page/10/mode/1up}}</ref>}} [[Latin]] grammars, such as ''[[Ars grammatica]]'', followed the Greek tradition, but added the [[ablative case]] of Latin. Later other European languages also followed that Graeco-Roman tradition. However, for some languages, such as Latin, due to case [[Syncretism (linguistics)|syncretism]] the order may be changed for convenience, where the accusative or the vocative cases are placed after the nominative and before the genitive. For example: {| |- | | {| class="wikitable" |+ Latin ! rowspan="2" | ! colspan="2" | {{wikt-lang|la|aqua|aqua, aquae}}<br />water {{abbr|f.|feminine}} ! colspan="2" | {{wikt-lang|la|bellum|bellum, bellī}}<br />war {{abbr|n.|neuter}} |- ! Singular ! Plural ! Singular ! Plural |- ! Nominative | rowspan="2" | aqua || rowspan="2" | aquae | rowspan="3" | bellum || rowspan="3" | bella |- ! Vocative |- ! Accusative | aquam || aquās |- ! Genitive | rowspan="2" | aquae || aquārum | bellī || bellōrum |- ! Dative | rowspan="2" | aquīs | rowspan="2" | bellō || rowspan="2" | bellīs |- ! Ablative | aquā |} |} For similar reasons, the customary order of the four cases in [[Icelandic grammar#Nouns|Icelandic]] is nominative–accusative–dative–genitive, as illustrated below: {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width=500px ! number || case || masculine || feminine || neuter || neuter |- ! rowspan=4 | singular || {{abbr|nom.|nominative}} | hattur || rowspan="3" | borg || rowspan="2" | glas || rowspan="2" | gler |- ! {{abbr|acc.|accusative}} | hatt |- ! {{abbr|dat.|dative}} | hatti || glasi || gleri |- ! {{abbr|gen.|genitive}} | hatts || borgar || glass ||glers |- ! rowspan=4 | plural || {{abbr|nom.|nominative}} | hattar || rowspan="2" | borgir || rowspan="2" | glös || rowspan="2" | gler |- ! {{abbr|acc.|accusative}} | hatta |- ! {{abbr|dat.|dative}} | höttum || borgum || glösum ||gler(j)um |- ! {{abbr|gen.|genitive}} | hatta || borga || glasa || gler(j)a |} [[Sanskrit]] similarly arranges cases in the order nominative-accusative-instrumental-dative-ablative-genitive-locative-vocative.<ref name=":4" /> The cases are individually named as the "first," "second," "third" and so on.<ref name=":4" /> For example, the common "when-then" construction is called the सति सप्तमी ''(Sati Saptami)''<ref>Chitrapur Math, "Step by Step Sanskrit Learning Programme" https://archive.org/details/SatiSaptami/mode/1up</ref> or "The Good Seventh" as it uses the locative, which is the seventh case.
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