The category of nouns serving as the indirect object of a verb.
1Paul, who had been wool-gathering, went back to nominative, dative, and ablative.
2It's called panis; genitive, pani; dative, pano; vocative, panus; ablative, pano.
3The genitive and dative are changed in the next example (I. iii.
4In that case one would parse it thus: nominative, HE; dative, HIM; possessive, HIS'N.
5It reminds Mary Leland that in Moscow, at Christmas, she lost the dative case.
6This is the dative singular with the definite article.
7The genitive case denotes dependence; the dative, transmission.
8The following are examples of the dative-objective:-
9ERDEN, old dative singular.
10STRAßEN, old weak dative.
12Where in the original the Greek word "cave" is in the genitive case, not as it should be, dative.
13The rounded form of g is found with the value of G in RECEI, which is probably the dative of rex.
14The dative, not ablative as the vernacular translators take it, is not bad grammar, although the genitive is more agreeable with usage.
15I'd want him to explain, too, what the binomial theorem has to do with complete living, and also the dative of reference.
16The locative case denotes the relation usually expressed in English by the use of a preposition, or by the genitive, dative and ablative in Latin.