Entertainment / Literature / Uninflected Genitive: A genitive that has no case ending to signal its function. A number of such uninflected genitives appeared in Early Modern English--especially for nouns that originally were feminine in Anglo-Saxon grammar or nouns ending in -s or preceding another word beginning with s-. Thus, we might find 'for conscience sake' and 'for God sake' in Shakespearean plays.
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Entertainment / Literature / Uninflected Genitive: A genitive that has no case ending to signal its function. A number of such uninflected genitives appeared in Early Modern English--especially for nouns that originally were feminine in Anglo-Saxon gr MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Uninflected Plural: A plural word identical to its singular form. For instance, 'I saw one deer yesterday, but last week I saw five deer.' Here, the word deer is identical whether it is singular or plural. Other examples MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Subjective Genitive: A genitive case common in Greek grammar in which the genitive functions as the origin or source (or subject) of the entire grammatical construction. David Smith notes that in such cases the substantiv MORE