Search references for LOCATIVE CASE. Phrases containing LOCATIVE CASE
See searches and references containing LOCATIVE CASE!LOCATIVE CASE
Grammatical case indicating a location
the locative case (/ˈlɒkətɪv/ LOK-ə-tiv; abbreviated loc) is a grammatical case which indicates a location. In languages using it, the locative case may
Locative_case
Categorization of nouns and modifiers by function
noun cases and Finnish locative system). Estonian has 14 (see Estonian locative system) and Hungarian has 18, both with additional archaic cases used
Grammatical_case
Declination patterns for nouns in the Finnish language
*at* math, in which only the first at has a locative meaning). In Finnish, the suffix -lla as a locative means "on (top)", but may function to code the
Finnish_noun_cases
Grammar of the Tamil language
grammatical case, of which there are 9: nominative case, accusative case, dative case, instrumental case, sociative case, locative case, ablative case, genitive
Tamil_grammar
Grammar of the Bengali language
noun's degree of animacy. The objective case cannot be inflected upon nouns which are inanimate, and the locative case cannot be inflected upon nouns which
Bengali_grammar
Grammatical case
prepositional case hails from the Proto-Indo-European locative case (present in Armenian, Sanskrit, and Old Latin, among others). The so-called "second locative" found
Adpositional_case
Tupian language of northwestern Brazil
in Tuparí: nuclear, locative, instrumental-lative, and oblique. Additionally, under certain conditions, Nuclear and Locative cases are able to stack (for
Tupari_language
Grammatical case
case is the sixth of the locative cases with the meaning "from, off, of": pöytä – pöydältä "table – off from the table". It is an outer locative case
Ablative_case
Official language of Mongolia
In addition to case, a number of postpositions exist that usually govern the genitive, dative-locative, comitative and privative cases, including a marked
Mongolian_language
Grammatical case
a more complicated system of locative cases and enclitics, and the original -s has merged with another lative or locative suffix and turned into the modern
Lative_case
Grammatical case generally used to indicate the noun to which something is given
dative case has assimilated the functions of other, now extinct cases. In Ancient Greek, the dative has the functions of the Proto-Indo-European locative and
Dative_case
Declensions in the Latvian language
are seven cases: nominative (nominatīvs) genitive (ģenitīvs) dative (datīvs) accusative (akuzatīvs) instrumental (instrumentālis) locative (lokatīvs)
Latvian_declension
Grammatical case
languages, such as Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian, it is the fourth of the locative cases, with the basic meaning of "on"—for example, Estonian laud (table) and
Adessive_case
Latin phrase
mistaken in accepting Brian's answer of the locative case, although the result was correct. The locative case indicates presence at or in a particular place
Romani_ite_domum
Grammatical case
The allative case (/ˈælətɪv/ AL-ə-tiv; abbreviated all; from Latin allāt-, afferre "to bring to") is a type of locative grammatical case. The term allative
Allative_case
Algonquian language of the Midwestern US
ahkihkonki 'in the bucket'. Locative marking is mutually exclusive with gender and number marking, so the gender and number of a locative noun can also only be
Miami–Illinois_language
Linguistic category of nouns
declension of locative cases (inessive, ablative, allative, terminal allative, and directional allative). For inanimate nouns, the locative case endings are
Noun_class
Grammatical case
In grammar, the inessive case (abbreviated ine; from Latin: inesse "to be in or at") is a locative grammatical case. This case carries the basic meaning
Inessive_case
list of grammatical cases as they are used by various inflectional languages that have declension. This list will mark the case, when it is used, an
List_of_grammatical_cases
Adverb that refers to a location
to that location. Generally, a locative adverb is semantically equivalent to a prepositional phrase involving a locative or directional preposition. In
Locative_adverb
Grammatical case used in languages such as Finnish, Lithuanian, and Hungarian
Lithuanian, Latvian, Hungarian, Sámi and Vepsian languages. It is one of the locative cases, and has the basic meaning of "into (the inside of)". Examples include:
Illative_case
Grammatical case
In grammar, the elative case (abbreviated ela; from Latin: efferre "to bring or carry out") is a locative grammatical case signifying that something comes
Elative_case
Northeast Caucasian language
of locative cases, which distinguish three categories: location, orientation, and direction. Thus, counting the both locative and non-locative cases, there
Tsez_language
Inflection of words according to number, gender, and/or case
in which cases were formed by adding the suffixes: -no (for nominative singular), -ge (genitive), -da (dative), -ac (accusative), -lo (locative), -in (instrumental)
Declension
Australian Aboriginal language
object-marking morphology. The locative marker (-nge ~ -e ~ -Vː) appears on the locative complement of a verb in plain form. The objective case serves this purpose
Lardil_language
Grammatical case
brother is unique". In Finnish, the essive case is technically categorized as an old locative case, a case that, in some way, indicates spatial location
Essive_case
Grammar of the Old Church Slavonic language
jednьnojǫ and also adverbially used oblique cases. Locative adverbs are by origin mostly petrified locative case forms of nouns: gorě, dolě, nizu, and the
Old_Church_Slavonic_grammar
Language of ancient Sumer and Babylon
vacillation in the choice between prioritizing it or the locative (Jagersma 2010: 442–444). The locative prefix is unique in that it is never attached to a
Sumerian_language
Grammatical case
languages reuse the adessive case where available, locative case if not, to mark the same category, or comitative case (Estonian). For example, the Finnish
Instrumental_case
Extinct Native American language
(ha:rhiwi:c 'bowl') ika:rá:hir 'with a rock' (ika:ʔa 'rock') Most nouns take a locative suffix kiyah: ika:kíyah ika:ʔa rock -kiyah LOC ika:ʔa -kiyah rock LOC 'where
Wichita_language
East Baltic language
original locative in singular and to the inessive in plural. The allative added *-pie > -p(i) to the genitive. The inessive has become the modern locative case
Lithuanian_language
Grammar of the Turkish language
is dative in many languages – "(give) trust to the government." The locative case tells where, hence corresponds to the English prepositions "at", "on"
Turkish_grammar
West Slavic language
(standard locative), mladým (standard instrumental) > mladým (Common Czech locative), mladym (Common Czech instrumental) > mladym (Common Czech locative/instrumental
Czech_language
Extinct Semitic language of Mesopotamia
language to use the prepositions ina and ana (locative case, English in/on/with, and dative-locative case, for/to, respectively). Other Semitic languages
Akkadian_language
Grammar of the Ubykh language
are two core cases and four non-core cases in Ubykh. The core cases are: relational, absolutive; the non-core cases are: adverbial, locative, instrumental
Ubykh_grammar
West Slavic language of eastern Germany
Before the ending -e in feminine nouns in the dative case, and in nouns of all genders in the locative case, alternations occur between a hard stem consonant
Upper_Sorbian_language
Grammatical rules of the Bulgarian language
grammatical cases: nominative, accusative, dative, genitive, locative, instrumental and vocative; of these, only what used to be nominative and vocative cases survive
Bulgarian_grammar
Uralic language spoken in Russia
Moksha has 13 productive cases, many of which are primarily locative cases. Locative cases in Moksha express ideas that Indo-European languages such as
Moksha_language
Ancestor of the Finnic languages
reconstructed locative cases of Proto-Finnic can be classified according to a three-way contrast (to, in and from a state) in each of the two series of locative cases:
Proto-Finnic_language
Cushitic language
take the locative suffix. The locative also seems to overlap somewhat with the instrumental, sometimes having a temporal function. The locative is formed
Oromo_language
Language of India
singular, whereas in the plural, the locative and accusative-dative are identical. In Konda, the locative case is used to indicate "in, on, into, onto"
Konda_language_(Dravidian)
Buddhist mantra
in the locative case, "wish-fulfilling jewel in the lotus", Sanskrit maṇi "wish-fulfilling/priceless gem, jewel, cintamani" and the locative of padma
Om_mani_padme_hum
Grammar of the Polish language
consonant changes caused by certain endings (such as the -ie of the locative case, and the -i of the masculine personal plural), which historically entailed
Polish_grammar
Polish word used as a joke by Mad magazine
Potrzebie (/pɒtrəˈziːbi/; Polish pronunciation: [pɔtˈʂɛbʲɛ], the dative/locative case form of the noun potrzeba, 'need') is a Polish word popularized by its
Potrzebie
Latin language in the period before 70 BC
Festus. The dative/ablative/locative plural -eis comes from earlier -ois, a merger of PIE instrumental plural *-ōis and locative plural *-oisu. The form -ois
Old_Latin
Process of word formation, by alteration to express grammatical categories
from Finnic. Latvian has only one overt locative case but it syncretizes the above four cases to the locative marking them by differences in the use of
Inflection
Earliest attested Turkic language
into their respective case systems. Rare in Buddhist Uyghur and Karakhanid. In directive-locative sense. In partitive-locative sense. Today this Old Turkic
Old_Turkic
Declensions in the Lithuanian language
variant of Lithuanian has seven cases; moreover, the illative case can be replaced with the locative case. The main cases are: nominative (vardininkas);
Lithuanian_declension
Ugric language spoken in Siberia
Nominative case Accusative case Dative case Lative case, merger of differentiated local cases that is used to indicate relative location. Locative case Used
Khanty_languages
East Slavic language
cases, as well as a single form for the dative and locative cases. Similarly, singular inanimate nouns share a form for nominative and locative cases
Rusyn_language
One of the six grammatical cases of nouns in Latin
and locative. It expresses concepts similar to those of the English prepositions from; with, by; and in, at. It is sometimes called the adverbial case, since
Ablative_(Latin)
Ancestor of the Indo-European languages
indicating the party being addressed. allative: used as a type of locative case that expresses movement towards something. It was preserved in Anatolian
Proto-Indo-European_language
Lezgic language of southern Dagestan, Russia
super 'on'. The locative cases can be suffixed to the noun alone, or the elative, lative, and comitative cases are suffixed onto the locative forms of the
Tabasaran_language
Reconstructed ancestor of the Sámi languages
the original Uralic locative *-na was repurposed as an essive, the ablative case *-ta became the partitive, and new locative cases were formed from these
Proto-Sámi_language
Subdivision of the Slavic language group
compare Russian рало); Palatized x developed into š, as in Polish musze (locative case of mucha, "fly"); The groups pj, bj, mj, vj developed into (soft) consonant
West_Slavic_languages
City in Boeotia, Greece
(Ancient Greek: Θήβαις, Thēbais, i.e. "at Thebes", Thebes in the dative-locative case), 𐀳𐀣𐀆, te-qa-de, for *Tʰēgʷasde (Θήβασδε, Thēbasde, i.e. "to Thebes")
Thebes,_Greece
Part of speech in the Slovene language
Accusative (tožilnik or akuzativ) Locative (mestnik or lokativ) Instrumental (orodnik or instrumental) Traditionally, the cases are given in the order above
Slovene_declension
Finnic language south of Lake Onega, Russia
grammatical cases, more than any other Finnic language. It preserves the basic set of Finnic cases shared by most Finnic languages, including the six locative cases
Veps_language
Uralic language
inflect in all cases. However, the inanimate interrogative pronouns 'what' in the locative cases have the base form кыт-. The nominative case of interrogative
Udmurt_language
Grammar of the Marathi language, an Indo-Aryan language spoken in Maharashtra, India
For example, सकाळ sakāḷa (morning) has a locative case of सकाळी sakāḷī, and घर ghara (house) has an ablative case of घरून gharūna The -ī suffix must be used
Marathi_grammar
Indo-Aryan language of Pakistan
different locative cases. The locative 1 expresses pointlike locations as opposed to those having linear extent. The locative 2 expresses horizontal motion
Khowar
Grammatical case for noun addressed
ending -y. Masculine nouns generally follow the complex pattern of the locative case, with the exception of a handful of words such as Bóg → Boże 'God',
Vocative_case
Utian language of North America
of common allative case usages: la:ma-t-Ø "at the tree" hollop-tHo-ʔ "in the hole" kacc-Ø-t-Ø "he said" Locative case: This case carries the meaning
Southern_Sierra_Miwok
Eastern Algonquian language
The locative is used to show where something is spatially. There is no obviative form for inanimate nouns, and neither the obviative nor the locative have
Mohegan-Pequot_language
Non-standard language usage
likely to produce these hypercorrect forms than female speakers. As the locative case is rarely found in vernacular usage in the southern and eastern dialects
Hypercorrection
Grammar of the Latin language
"home", have a seventh case called the locative, for example Rōmae "in Rome" or domī "at home"; however, most nouns do not have this case. The genitive, dative
Latin_grammar
Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Bhutan
emphasis. Dzongkha nouns are marked for 5 cases: genitive, locative, ablative, dative and ergative. genitive case: marks possession and is often translated
Dzongkha
Address on the World Wide Web
A uniform resource locator (URL), colloquially known as a web address, is a reference to a resource on the World Wide Web. A URL specifies the location
URL
Extinct language isolate of the Mississippi Valley
possible locative suffixes to put nouns in the locative case. The nouns will also have a determining prefix attached. Gender-number suffixes and locative suffixes
Tunica_language
Extinct Turkic language spoken by the Göktürks
sometimes takes the suffixes -qa/-ke/-ğa/-ge when the same is the case. In the locative case, the letters l and n sometimes have the suffix -te/-ta but sometimes
Orkhon_Turkic
Grammatical rules of the Finnish language
fifteen noun cases: four grammatical cases, six locative cases, two essive cases (three in some Eastern dialects), and three marginal cases. Some notes
Finnish_grammar
West Slavic language
one another within the same word. In such cases the second vowel is shortened. For example, adding the locative plural ending -ách to the root vín- creates
Slovak_language
Chibchan language of Honduras
spatial relationships are composed of possessed relational nouns + locative case-suffix -yã̀. Examples of these terms: a-sùkk-yã̀ 'behind/back' a-wákiʔ-yã̀
Pech_language
Reconstructed ancestor of the Afroasiatic language family
Proto-Afroasiatic locative case. Diakonoff also believed he could reconstruct a comitative-dative case in *-dV or *-Vd, an ablative-comparative case in *-kV, a
Proto-Afroasiatic_language
Grammatical voice
applicative prefixes: DATTooltip Dative case ko-, INSTooltip Instrumental case e-, and LOCTooltip Locative case o-, each of which serves to increase the
Applicative_voice
Indigenous language spoken in parts of Mexico
grammatical case and postpositions. The case system distinguishes nominative, accusative, genitive, comitative, instrumental, and locative cases, but there
Purépecha_language
Lezgic language spoken in southern Russia
There is also a locative-case series in which 6 directional-case suffixes are combined with 5 spatial cases to produce a total of 30 case-localization combinations
Archi_language
Indian honorific
and meaning"husband" instrumental case p/atyā-; dative case p/atye-; genitive case ablative p/atyur-; locative case p/atyau-; But when meaning"lord, master"
Pati_(title)
Northern Siberian Turkic language
thus leaving no case form for the function of locative. Instead, locative, dative and allative cases are realized through Common Turkic dative suffix:
Yakut_language
second syllable, means "never", when stressed on the first it is the locative case of Nikola, i.e. Nicholas. Spanish – cuando las vacas vuelen ("when cows
List of idioms of improbability
List_of_idioms_of_improbability
Tupian language spoken in Brazil
appear at the end of sentences; locative adverbs, which denote location, typically apprear at the end of sentences. Locative concepts can also be expressed
Avá-Canoeiro_language
Ndu language spoken in Papua New Guinea
transitive objects, the locative case can also mark themes, manner, material, instruments, goals, sources and animate recipients. In case of the animate recipients
Iatmul_language
Lacking or omission of a "to be" verb, common in some languages and stylistic in others
The copula is only used with nouns. Sometimes the noun can be in the locative case: Сез өйдәсез (Sez öydäsez, "You are at home"). In Japanese, the copula
Zero_copula
Media of communication functionally bound to a location
prominent creative use of locative media is in locative media art. A sub-category of interactive art or new media art, locative media art explores the relationships
Locative_media
Tungusic language of eastern Russia and China
LOCDIR:locative-directive case ALLLOC:allative-locative case ACD:accusative case, definite PRO:prolative case INS:instrumental case SEM:semblative case POS:possessed
Evenki_language
Dialect of the Ukrainian or Rusyn language
Ukrainian - коні, люди); preservation of ending -и in genitive and locative case among some feminine nouns: земли, на земли (standard Ukrainian - землі
Transcarpathian_dialect
Indo-European language
nouns take the dative. Additionally, animate nouns can never take the locative case. Examples of noun declension in Western Armenian Verbs in Armenian have
Armenian_language
Dialect of the Evenki language
stems and derivative forms. The case forms with reduced stems are the dative case of e-dü/ta-du and the locative case of e-lee/ta-laa, while the derivative
Solon_language
Dormant Northwest Caucasian language
'(to) a child') locative case, marked in -/ʁɜ/, which is the equivalent of English in, on or at. There are X[clarification needed] other cases that exist in
Ubykh_language
Риме I was in Rome (locative) Я иду в Рим I go to Rome (accusative) Яблоко лежало на земле The apple lay on the ground (locative) Яблоко упало на землю
Casally_modulated_preposition
Collection of Buddhist mystical poems
Genitive case ending – case ending in -ara: sasara siṁge (41). Locative case ending – case ending in -ata, e: māṅgata caṛhile (8), bāṭata milila (8), bājai
Charyapada
Grammar of the Telugu language
grammatical case, in comparison with classical Telugu: Only the nominative, genitive, accusative, and dative cases are regularly used, and the locative case is
Telugu_grammar
Extinct Northwest Semitic language
“good” > ṭāba, “well”) and as a kind of locative (šamîma = “to the heavens, in heaven”). More often, a locative is formed by appending a suffix -h to the
Ugaritic
Omotic language spoken in Ethiopia
1-Nominative case 2-Absolutive case 3-Genitive Case 4-Dative case 5-Allative case 6-Ablative case 7-Locative case 8-Comitative case 9-Instrumental
Koore_language
Variety of the Ukrainian language
-их in dative and locative case of plural nouns: кон’им, пол’им, на кон’их, на пол’их; nouns ending with -а, -ja in instrumental case have endings -оў
Hutsul_dialect
Extinct Maiduan language of northeastern California, US
'that bread is made with white man's flour'. Locative: The locative case is marked with /di/. This case indicates a static location in space, the space
Maidu_language
14 verses organizing the phonemes of Sanskrit
replace i u ṛ ḷ. aC means all vowels, as noted above aCi is in the locative case, so it means before any vowel. Hence this rule replaces a vowel with
Shiva_Sutras
Theory in linguistic typology
vocative case. In Punjabi, the accusative, genitive, and dative have merged to an oblique case, but the language still retains vocative, locative, and ablative
Case_hierarchy
Abuse case in California
The Turpin case involved the abuse of children and dependent adults by their biological parents, David and Louise Turpin of Perris, California, US. The
Turpin_case
Turkic language
need for this once the principle has been grasped" (Lewis [2001]). the locative case suffix, for example, is -de after front vowels and -da after back vowels
Turkish_language
LOCATIVE CASE
LOCATIVE CASE
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Vernon in Eure, France, named from the Gaulish element ver(n) ‘alder’ + the Gallo-Roman locative suffix -o (genitive -Ånis).French : habitational name from the same place as in 1 or from any of numerous other places in France with the same name and etymology.
Surname or Lastname
English and Irish (of Norman origin; also written De Coursey)
English and Irish (of Norman origin; also written De Coursey) : habitational name for someone from any of various places in northern France called Courcy, from the Romano-Gallic personal name Curtius (a derivative of Latin curtus ‘short’; compare Court 2) + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English and Irish (of Norman origin)
English and Irish (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Lassy in Calvados, named from a Gaulish personal name Lascius (of uncertain meaning) + the locative suffix -acum. The surname is widespread in Britain and Ireland, but most common in Nottinghamshire. In Ireland the family is associated particularly with County Limerick.
Surname or Lastname
French
French : habitational name from any of the places called Biron, in Charente-Maritime, Dordogne, and Basses Pyrénées. The Latin form of the name is Biriacum, from a Gaulish personal name Birius + the locative suffix -acum.English : variant spelling of Byron.A Biron is documented at Trois Rivières, Quebec, in 1686.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Saint-Paul-du-Vernay in Calvados or any of various other places in northern France named with Vernay, from the Gaulish element vern ‘alder’ + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name, with the preposition d(e), from Orsay in Seine-et-Orne, France, recorded in the 13th century as Orceiacum, from the Latin personal name Orcius + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Pacy-sur-Eure, which took its name from the Gallo-Roman personal name Paccius + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Bury in Lancashire (now part of Greater Manchester), or from some other similarly named place. The place name comes from the dative case, byrig, of Old English burh ‘fortified place’. Compare Burke, originally used after a preposition (e.g. Richard atte Bery).French : habitational name from places so named in Marne and Oise. The place name is from Buriacum, the name of a Gallo-Roman estate, composed of the personal name Burius + the locative suffix -acum.German : probably a variant spelling of Buri. According to Gottschald, however, it is from French Purry.Czech (Burý) : topographic name from bur ‘pine wood’.Czech (Burý) : descriptive nickname from burý ‘dark’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : Norman habitational name from any of several places in northern France called Bouillé or Bully, from a Gaulish personal name of uncertain form and meaning + the locative suffix -acum.English : habitational name from Bulleigh in Devon or Bulley in Gloucestershire, both named with Old English bula ‘bull’ + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Pavilly in Seine-Maritime, which is named with the Gallo-Roman personal name Pavilius + the locative suffix -acum.English : from a pet form of Paul.Possibly an altered spelling of Pauli.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Notre-Dame-de-Courson in Calvados, France, which was named with the Romano-Gallic personal name Curtius (from curtus ‘short’) + the locative suffix -o, genitive -onis. There is also a place called Curzon in Vendée, but this is not the source of the English surname.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from either of two places, Saint-Aubin-du-Thennay or Saint-Jean-du-Thennay, in Eure, Normandy, both so named from an uncertain first element (possibly a Gallo-Roman personal name or the Gaulish word tann ‘oak’, ‘holly’) + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name, with the preposition d(e), for someone from Isigny in Calvados, France, named from the Romano-Gallic personal name Isinius (a Latinized form of Gaulish Isina) + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : (of Norman origin): habitational name from any of several places in Calvados, France, called Ouilly, named with the Gallo-Roman personal name Ollius + the locative suffix -acum.English : Possibly also an altered spelling of Dooley.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Chesney.French : habitational name from a place in Yonne, which takes its name from a Romano-Gallic estate, Caniacum ‘estate of a man named Canius’, from the Roman personal name + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Marigni in La Manche, so called from the Gallo-Roman personal name Marinius + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a smith, with the distinguishing epithet high, probably denoting one whose forge was at a higher location than another nearby smith.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from places in northern France called Tournai (Orne), Tournay (Calvados), or Tourny (Eure), all named with the pre-Roman personal name Turnus (probably meaning ‘height’, ‘eminence’) + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Pusey in Oxfordshire (formerly in Berkshire ), so called from Old English peose, piosu ‘pea(s)’ + ēg ‘island’, ‘low-lying land’, or from Pewsey in Wiltshire, recorded in Domesday Book as Pevesie, apparently from the genitive case of an Old English personal name Pefe, not independently attested + Old English ēg ‘island’.French : habitational name form Pusey in Haute-Saône, so named from a Gallo-Roman personal name, Pusius, + the locative suffix -acum.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : habitational name, with fused preposition d(e), for someone from Anizy in Calvados, France, recorded in 1155 in the form Anisie. The place name is probably derived from the Romano-Gallic personal name Anitius (of uncertain origin) + the locative suffix -acum.
LOCATIVE CASE
LOCATIVE CASE
Girl/Female
Muslim
Quail, Solace
Boy/Male
Hindu
Intelligent
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Everything
Boy/Male
Hindu
Prosperity or awakening or high quality, Advancement - to rise
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Japanese
Star
Girl/Female
British, English
Fidgety
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Ibn-Aybak was a leading historian
Girl/Female
Irish
The feminine form of Ciaran, from the Irish ciar meaning “dark†and implies “dark hair and brown eyes.†St. Ciara was a distinguished seventh-century figure who established a monastery at Kilkeary in County Tipperary. It was the fourth most popular baby girl name in Ireland in 2003.
Girl/Female
Greek Italian Spanish
Pure.
Boy/Male
Tamil
LOCATIVE CASE
LOCATIVE CASE
LOCATIVE CASE
LOCATIVE CASE
LOCATIVE CASE
n.
The act or process of locating.
imp. & p. p.
of Localize
n.
The vocative case.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Localize
n.
The locative case.
a.
Yielding lucre; gainful; profitable; making increase of money or goods; as, a lucrative business or office.
n.
Situation; position; location.
a.
Distant in location; remote.
adv.
In a coactive manner.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Locate
v. t.
To localize.
a.
Of or pertaining to calling; used in calling; specifically (Gram.), used in address; appellative; -- said of that case or form of the noun, pronoun, or adjective, in which a person or thing is addressed; as, Domine, O Lord.
n.
A location or compartment.
a.
Indicating place, or the place where, or wherein; as, a locative adjective; locative case of a noun.
a.
Vested or vesting by donation; as, a donative advowson.
v. t.
To designate the site or place of; to define the limits of; as, to locate a public building; to locate a mining claim; to locate (the land granted by) a land warrant.
n.
A laxative medicine. See the Note under Cathartic.
n.
A second location.
a.
Profitable; advantageous; lucrative.
adv.
In a lucrative manner.