This construction is sometimes called the separation dative. (You can find dative in the World Legal Encyclopedia and etimology more terms). In The Etruscan Language: An Introduction by Giuliano and Larissa Bonfante, first published in 1983 and reissued in 2002 with little significant revision, the case shows -si and -le on page 83 are called „datives“. Blomfield would add to the dative [Greek: ennoia], which is easier. Learn from the vocabulary the difference between _aliquís_ and _aliquí_. mátúrandum sibi, „they should hurry“, literally „hurry should be done by them“; mátúrandum (_esse_) is the impersonal passive and sibi is the so-called dative of the agent. Mid-15 years. ==References=====External links===* Official website in grammatical use of the Greek dotike (ptosis) „dative (cas)“, from dotikos „of the giving nature“, from the dottos „given“, from the pie root *do- „to give“, from the same PIE root as the Latin word. In the law, „it can be eliminated at will“, starting in the 1530s. Typically the case of the indirect object, but sometimes also indicative of „movement towards“. In ancient Germanic languages, the „fourth case“, a collective term for dative, ablative, locative and other Indo-European cases. They sincerely believed in the highest sense of quadratic equations, and the rule for special verbs that determine the dative was part of their Decalogue. dāt′iv, adj., which is given or named.
– n. the dative case, the oblique case of nouns, &c. – usually indicated in English by to or for. [L. dativus.] It is derived from omnibus, which is the dative plural of the Latin word omnis, so it means „for all“ – a „vehicle for all“. A word derived from Roman law which means „appointed by public authority“. In Scotland, for example, an executor is a court-appointed executor who corresponds to an English administrator. Mozley and Whitley. In the old English law. In his own gift; which can be given and disposed of at will and at will. Despite an academic distinction between the garden variety dative and the so-called agent dative, the distinction is difficult to discern, as both supposedly use the same purpose.
The word „ge“ (or „ye“ or how it was written centuries ago) is related to the Italian dative pronoun (indirect object) „glie“, which is used in the same way before other pronouns, both words apparently coming from the Latin dative pronoun ILLI. [102] Salluste may have said _hujus imperii_, but he prefers the dative, which is a dativus incommodi. The numerical value of the dative in Chaldean numerology is: 3. Removable, unlike perpetual motion; said by an agent. Prometheus and the Seven of Aeschylus bind Prometheus against Thebes in his own gift; can be ceded as an office or other privilege at will and at good pleasure. Etymology: From dativus (suitable to give), even from datus (the partizip passed from do) + -ivus `-ive`. Given by a judge, instead of being thrown at a party by the law itself, this definition of the dative is based on The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary. This entry must be reread. C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario and Jugurthino Note the case of a name that expresses the most distant or indirect object that is usually indicated in English by to or for the target.
Middle English datif, from the Latin dativus, from datus. The medieval Latin dativus is subject to the nomination, from the Latin, assigned (of a guardian), of datus, past participle of dare to give the category of nouns that serve as an indirect object of a verb.