142 examples of genitives in sentences

Genitive.

αι ον ας or ης Genitive.

οι α ου Genitive.

ος Genitive.

ἐγώ ἡμεῖς σύ ὑμεῖς Genitive.

οἱ τά αἱ τοῦ τῆς Genitive.

οὗτοι ταῦτα αὗται τούτου ταύτης Genitive.

-|-> | Genitive.

GENITIVE, denoting origin, answering to Whence?

σκιά ϑύρα ῥίζα τιμή νεανίας κριτής Genitive.

σκιαί ϑύραι ῥίζαι τιμαί νεανίαι κριταί Genitive.

Nominative. λόγος λόγοι Ἰησοῦς σῦκον σῦκα Genitive.

Nominative. ποιμένες λέοντες τρίχες πόλεις σώματα φῶτά τείχη Genitive.

καλός καλή καλόν καλοί καλαί καλά Genitive.

"WHOSE, the possessive or genitive case of who or which; applied to persons or things.

The objective case in English usually stands for the Latin genitive, dative, accusative, and ablative; hence any rule that shall embrace the whole construction of this one case, will be the sole counterpart to four fifths of all the rules in any code of Latin syntax.

This is the true explanation of all the "double genitives" which our grammarians discover; for when the first noun is partitive, it naturally suggests more or other things of the same kind, belonging to this possessor; and when such is not the meaning, this construction is improper.

This is the proper meaning of the Greek text above; but the construction is different, the Greek nouns being genitives in apposition.

"The apostrophe and s, ('s,) is an abbreviation for is, the termination of the old English genitive.

18.The comparative degree, in Greek, is said to govern the genitive case; in Latin, the ablative: that is, the genitive or the ablative is sometimes put after this degree without any connecting particle corresponding to than, and without producing a compound sentence.

18.The comparative degree, in Greek, is said to govern the genitive case; in Latin, the ablative: that is, the genitive or the ablative is sometimes put after this degree without any connecting particle corresponding to than, and without producing a compound sentence.

Is the Latin gerund, like the verbal in ing, sometimes active, sometimes passive; and when the former governs the genitive, do we imitate the idiom in English?

Is it agreed among grammarians, that the Latin gerund may govern the genitive of the agent?

of "Genitives, double," discovered by our grammarians, the true explanation of all such Gentile names, nature and construc.

EACH OTHER, and ONE ANOTHER, are our reciprocal forms, which are treated exactly as if they were compound pronouns, taking for their genitives, each other's, one another's.

142 examples of  genitives  in sentences