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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

the
genitive
for
possession
or
partitive
relationships;
the
dative
for
an
indirect
object;
and
the
ablative
for
means,
accompaniment,
or
instrument.
The
vocative
serves
for
direct
address.
Some
languages
also
feature
locative
(location)
or
instrumental
(means)
as
distinct
cases,
and
several
languages
differentiate
several
oblique
cases.
noun
phrase.
When
inflection
is
limited,
prepositions
or
syntactic
position
convey
the
function.
Pronoun
systems
frequently
preserve
more
case
contrasts
than
nouns
in
analytic
languages.
puellam
amat
illustrates
nominative
subject
and
accusative
object.
vary
widely
across
languages.
See
also:
grammatical
case,
nominative
case,
genitive
case,
dative
case.