| 1. | I, he, she, we, they are pronouns in the Nominative case.
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| 2. | The perfect passive participle ends in-atus,-ata, or-atum in the nominative case.
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| 3. | In the nominative case it is the title of Stravinsky's ballet.
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| 4. | The nominative case is unmarked, while the remaining cases are expressed by different suffixes.
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| 5. | Some feminine nouns take the suffix "-i " in nominative case without an article.
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| 6. | Like other Slavic languages, Czech distinguishes two different plural forms in the nominative case.
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| 7. | Consequently, the feminine singular subject noun " Carthago " appears in the nominative case.
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| 8. | Typically, languages have nominative case nouns converting into genitive case.
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| 9. | One with nominative case and the other with genetive case.
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| 10. | Full noun phrases ( determiner phrases ) cannot be assigned accusative or nominative case.
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