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caselor

Caselor is a Romanian grammatical form rather than a standalone concept. It represents the genitive/dative plural of casa, the word for house, and is used to indicate possession or to mark indirect objects when referring to multiple houses. As a case form, caselor does not carry a meaning on its own but functions within noun phrases or after prepositions.

In standard Romanian usage, caselor appears in phrases such as ferestrele caselor, meaning “the windows of the

Caselor is commonly encountered in everyday Romanian grammar and writing when describing relationships between multiple houses.

houses,”
or
din
caselor,
meaning
“from
the
houses”
(or
to/for
the
houses
in
contexts
that
require
the
indirect
object).
The
corresponding
nominative
plural
is
casele,
which
means
“the
houses,”
while
caselor
marks
grammatical
relations
in
the
genitive
or
dative
sense.
Romanian
nouns
decline
for
number
and
case,
and
caselor
exemplifies
how
feminine
nouns
ending
in
-a
shift
in
their
plural
genitive/dative
form.
It
is
not
a
separate
lexical
item
with
its
own
definition;
instead,
it
is
a
specific
inflected
form
used
within
sentences
to
convey
possession
or
indirect
object
relations
tied
to
more
than
one
house.
For
learners,
recognizing
caselor
as
the
genitive/dative
plural
of
casa
helps
in
parsing
phrases
that
refer
to
ownership,
origin,
or
destination
involving
multiple
houses.