Plural: accusatives
The category of nouns serving as the direct object of a verb; SYN. accusative case, objective case.
The case of a noun or pronoun that is the object of a verb or is governed by a preposition. For example: He stroked the dog. I worked in the shed. Here, dog and shed are both in the accusative case. Dog is the object of the verb stroked; shed is governed by (its form controlled) by the preposition in.
In the grammar of some inflected languages, such as Latin, Greek, and Russian, the accusative case is the form of a noun, pronoun, or adjective used when it is the direct object of a verb. The accusative is also used for the object of certain prepositions.
accurate scale · accure · accurse · accursed · accursedly · accurst · accurtation · accusable · accusal · accusant · accusation · accusatival · accusative · accusatively · accusatorial · accusatorially · accusatory · accuse · accused · accused of conspiracy · accuser · accuse somebody of burglary · accuse somebody of murder
Četvrti padež u našem jeziku koji označava predmet na kome se vrši glagolska rada; dobija se na pitanje: koga, šta, što.
Akuzativ.
Blamingly, in an accusatory manner; relating to the case which marks the object of a verb (Grammar)
accurse · accursed · accursedly · accurst · accurtation · accusable · accusal · accusant · accusation · accusatival · accusative · accusatively · accusatorial · accusatorially · accusatory · accuse · accused · accused of conspiracy · accuser · accuse somebody of burglary · accuse somebody of murder