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In grammar, the terminative or terminalis case (abbreviated TERM) is a case specifying a limit in space and time and also to convey the goal or target of an action.[1]
Assamese
editIn the Assamese language, the terminative case is indicated by the suffix -(অ)লৈকে -(o)loike:
আজিৰ
azir
পৰা
pora
পৰহিলৈকে
porohiloike
'from today up to the-day-after-tomorrow'
মৰিগাঁৱৰ
morigaor
পৰা
pora
হোজাইলৈকে
hüzailoike
'From Morigaon up to Hojai.'
নৈৰ
noir
ইপাৰৰ
iparor
পৰা
pora
সিপাৰলৈকে
xiparoloike
'From this bank up to that bank of the river'
Bashkir
editIn the Bashkir language, the terminative case is indicated by the suffix -ğasa/-gäsä/-qasa/-käsä:
киске
kiske
12-нән
12-nän
таңғы
tañğï
етегәсә
yetegäsä
'from 12 pm up to 7 am'
Был
Bïl
аҙнала
aðnala
32
32
градусҡаса
gradusqasa
эҫетәсәк.
eśetäsäk
'This week, it will get hot up to 32 degrees (celsius).'
However, postpositions тиклем (tiklem), хәтлем (xätlem), ҡәҙәр (qäðär) 'till, up to' are more frequently used in Bashkir to convey this meaning.
Classical Hebrew
editT.J. Meek has argued that "the so-called locative hē" in Classical Hebrew "is terminative only and should be renamed terminative hē."[2]
Estonian
editIn the Estonian language, the terminative case is indicated by the '-ni' suffix:
- jõeni: 'to the river'/'as far as the river'
- kella kuueni: 'until six o'clock'
Hungarian
editThe Hungarian language uses the '-ig' suffix.
- a házig: 'as far as the house'
- hat óráig/hatig: 'until six o'clock'
If used for time, it can also show how long the action lasted.
- hat óráig: 'for six hours'/'six hours long'
- száz évig: 'for a hundred years'
It is not always clear whether the thing in terminative case belongs to the interval in question or not.
- A koncertig maradtam.: 'I stayed until the concert (ended or started?)' Here it is more likely that the person only stayed there until the concert began.
- Mondj egy számot 1-től 10-ig!: 'Say a number from 1 to (until) 10.' However here 10 can be said as well.
The corresponding question word is meddig?, which is simply the question word mi? ('what?') in terminative case.
Sumerian
editIn Sumerian, the terminative case -še not only was used to indicate end-points in space or time but also end-points of an action itself such as its target or goal. In this latter role, it functioned much like an accusative case.
Finnish
editThe use of the postposition asti (or synonymously saakka) with the illative (or allative or sublative) case in Finnish very closely corresponds to the terminative. These same postpositions with the elative (or ablative) case also express the opposite of a terminative: a limit in time or space of origination or initiation.
Japanese
editThe Japanese particle まで (made) acts like a terminative case.
See also
editFurther reading
edit- Anhava, Jaakko (2015). "Criteria For Case Forms in Finnish and Hungarian Grammars". journal.fi. Helsinki: Finnish Scholarly Journals Online.
References
edit- ^ Haspelmath, Martin (2008-11-27). Malchukov, Andrej L.; Spencer, Andrew (eds.). Terminology of Case. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199206476.013.0034.
- ^ Meek, Theophile James (1940). "The Hebrew Accusative of Time and Place". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 60 (2): 224–233. doi:10.2307/594010. JSTOR 594010.