Casus
Casus is a term used in linguistics and grammar to describe a grammatical category that marks the role of a noun, pronoun, or adjective in a sentence. The word is derived from Latin casus, meaning “case” or “occurrence,” and in traditional Latin grammars it referred to the morphological forms of a noun that indicate its syntactic function. In languages with inflected nouns, cases are typically expressed by distinct endings, by separate words, or by a combination of both. Some languages have many cases; others rely more on word order or prepositions.
Common cases include the nominative for the subject of a sentence; the accusative for the direct object;
In practice, cases are marked through noun, pronoun, and adjective inflection, often with agreement within a
Example in Latin: servus (nom.), servum (acc.), servi (gen.), servo (dat./abl.), serve (voc.); a sentence like Servus
Casus interact with syntax and morphology to express grammatical relations, and the presence and type of cases