[
UK
/nˈɒmɪnətˌɪv/
]
NOUN
- the category of nouns serving as the grammatical subject of a verb
ADJECTIVE
-
named; bearing the name of a specific person
nominative shares of stock -
serving as or indicating the subject of a verb and words identified with the subject of a copular verb
predicate nominative
nominative noun endings - appointed by nomination
How To Use nominative In A Sentence
- English is called a nominative-accusative language because both transitive and intransitive verbs take subjects. Behind Bars | ATTACKERMAN
- I feel really stupid for asking this, but I really do not see the text giving any other alternative, it purely gives the nominative *ǵʰésor. which could very well be the origin of kessar. I tripped over Pre-IE the other day
- A quick and easy example of this is Bhadriraju Krishnamurti's use of laryngeals in the 1st and second pronouns *yān 'I' and *nīn 'you' or in his view, *yaHn and *niHn1 to account for lengthening in the nominative which opposes oblique stems *yan- and *nin- lacking added vocalic length. Archive 2009-07-01
- The nominal part of this prepositional phrase is not in the nominative case.
- It's the nominative masculine plural definite article.
- Thus in Czech, liquids are treated as moraic and both syllables show normal sonority peaks headed by the most sonorant phoneme of the group (i.e. s PIE *ḱunós 'of the dog') can only be a declined noun based on its form (because of its zerograded root *kun-) and at this stage, no derivative of "dog" can start with *kun- in the nominative or accusative cases either. Pre-IE Syncope has an easter-egg surprise for you
- _The relative is the nominative case to the verb, when no nominative comes between it and the verb_. English Grammar in Familiar Lectures
- A group of women, who dislike the notion of nominative determinism and therefore eschew a title, has written to the ministry, demanding an explanation. Patrick Galey: Why Sex Shouldn't Sell for Lebanon's Tourists
- Nouns ending in the Nominative Singular in - vus, - vum, - quus, exhibited two types of inflection in the classical Latin, -- an earlier and a later, -- as follows: -- New Latin Grammar
- The New Scientist gave it the name nominative determinism - the idea that there is a link between people's names and their occupation. CUANAS