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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Dative construction 8 found (87 total)
alternate case: dative construction
Double dative
(270 words)
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"Who benefits?", or more literally "To whose advantage?" The double dative construction sounds unnatural if translated literally, "to whom for an advantage"
Cui bono?
(160 words)
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their perpetrators; especially financially. The phrase is a double dative construction . It can also be rendered as cui prodest? ("whom does it profit?")
Bolognese dialect
(5,138 words)
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Bolognese (native name: bulgnaiṡ [buʎˈɲai̯z]) is a dialect of Emilian spoken in the most part in the city of Bologna and its hinterland (except east of
Areal feature
(1,365 words)
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transitive verb (e.g. "I have") for possession, rather than a possessive dative construction such as mihi est (Latin: 'to me is') which is more likely the original
Coeur d'Alene language
(3,666 words)
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third, much less frequent, applicative -tułt. can also indicate a dative construction , indicating the object to which something is given. It is also worthwhile
Erzgebirgisch
(2,938 words)
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n and r. examples: Third person pronouns make heavy use of the dative construction (see above), just like nouns. vgl.: The following construction is
Inalienable possession
(7,971 words)
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ISBN 9780199202720. Kempchinsky, Paula (1992). "The Spanish possessive dative construction : θ-role assignment and proper government". In Hirschbühler, Paul;
Rhinelandic regiolect
(2,368 words)
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contraction nor a German-like case system in Dutch). The possessive-dative construction replaces the standard genitive. The possessor is named in the dative