| 31. | This is particularly true of the genitive case, which is still used occasionally to evoke a formal style.
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| 32. | For emphasis or clarification, the possessor can be given outside the word as well, using the genitive case.
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| 33. | Tallinna in Estonian denotes the genitive case of the name, as in Tallinna Reisisadam ('the Port of Tallinn').
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| 34. | In German, pronouns are followed by the accusative case or by the dative case, rarely by the genitive case.
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| 35. | For simplicity, the table below classifies casual languages in which the nominal attribute is marked with the genitive case.
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| 36. | Indeed, the genitive case has been widely out of use in most dialects of the German language for centuries.
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| 37. | The addition of " s " to the father's first name makes Reynolds a simple genitive case patronymic ..
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| 38. | In Old English, the genitive case was marked most often by an "-es " ending for masculine and neuter nouns.
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| 39. | A complication in Finnic languages is that the accusative case "-( e ) n " is homophonic to the genitive case.
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| 40. | Comparatives are often used with a Modern ) this can be done by placing the compared noun in the genitive case.
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