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case
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case

In grammar, the different forms (inflections) taken by nouns, pronouns, and adjectives depending on their function in a sentence. English is a language with four inflections; most words have no more than two forms. For example, six pronouns have one form when they are the subject of the verb, and a different form when they are either objects of the verb or governed by a preposition. The six are: I/me, he/him, she/her, we/us, they/them, who/whom. In ‘I like cats’, I is the subject of the sentence. In ‘Cats hate me’, me is the object. Latin has six cases, and Hungarian more than 25.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
This Alert provides a case summary and a number of practical recommendations.
According to the case summary, prepared by the Office of the Clerk, "The matter must be remanded for a new trial, where the parties may present expert evidence regarding whether a condition of the knee adjusted in this case bore a nexus to a spinal condition, qualifying it as a manipulation of a related structure.
The revelations were made in a 96-page case summary detailing the NCAA's four major accusations against Sampson, his staff and the Hoosiers.
 
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