Ablative
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English
Etymology
French ablatif, ablative, Latin ablativus from ablatus. See Ablation
Adjective
- (Obsolete): Taking away or removing
- Quotation
- Where the heart is forestalled with misopinion, ablative directions are found needful to unteach error, ere we can learn truth - Bp. Hall
- Quotation
- (Grammar): Applied to one of the cases of the noun in Latin and some other languages, -- the fundamental meaning of the case being removal, separation, or taking away.
Translations
- Dutch: ablatief m
- Finnish: ablatiivi
- French: ablatif m
- German: ablativ m
- Interlingua: ablative
- Italian: ablativo
- Japanese: 奪格 (だっかく, dakkaku)
- Portuguese: ablativo
- Spanish: ablativo m
Noun
- (Grammar): The ablative case.
Derived Terms
- ablative absolute - a construction in Latin, in which a noun in the ablative case has a participle (either expressed or implied), agreeing with it in gender, number, and case, both words forming a clause by themselves and being unconnected, grammatically, with the rest of the sentence; as, Tarquinio regnante, Pythagoras venit, i. e. "Tarquinius reigning, Pythagoras came".