| 1. | German often expresses a benefitor with a single dative case pronoun.
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| 2. | Here G�taland appears in the plural form of the dative case.
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| 3. | :: It doesn't require a preposition as it's in dative case.
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| 4. | This indirect object must also carry a dative case suffix.
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| 5. | The distinct dative case was lost in early Middle English.
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| 6. | But the dative case encompasses indefinite objects as well, which will not be marked by-kv:
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| 7. | Conway reconstructs the first word as * albe ( n ) si, a dative case.
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| 8. | The dative case, however, lived on in a few dialects well into the 20th century.
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| 9. | The "'dative construction "'is a grammatical way of constructing a sentence, using the dative case.
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| 10. | For indirect objects you usually use the dative case, but there is also the ablative.
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