objective case
The Objective case is used with the objects of verbs (both direct and indirect) and prepositions.
Alia nay herat say parchay ko dobera###usay (objective case), who,us ki
Law et al., "An objective case definition of lipodystrophy in HIV-infected adults: a case-control study," The Lancet, vol.
Despite the fact that the vast majority of pro-life activism is motivated by religious dogma, there is an objective case against abortion.
I couldn't make an objective case for him and don't believe that personal interests should enter into these awards, so I didn't.
Whom -- whom is the objective case. "For whom the bell tolls." But in the clause, "the man who police said was involved in the mishap is a newshound ..." "who" relates to the subject "man" and is not the object of the verb "said." Try deleting "police said--"the man who was involved," and the sentence is still correct.
Which ocean creature is one of the sides of a room + the objective case of we?
Bremner growls in "Words on Words," "Prepositions take the objective case: between you and me, between her and him, between them and us." He dubs between you and I a barbarism.
Although the prescriptive grammar tradition stipulates the subjective case form, the objective case form is normally felt to be the natural one, particularly in informal style.
(At other times ye is the plural for you.) Thee is the objective case of thou or you.
Use "him," "her" and "them" in objective case. Objective indicates that the person or thing described is receiving the action.
seems to assert this by a kind of theological fiat, one can mount a good objective case for his claim.
Smollett is castigated for his |inelegance' in using the construction |in regard that' by Joseph Priestley, whilst Lowth himself receives correction for his use of |Such verb cannot admit of an objective case after it' in his own Grammar.