| Now just what is the case of a noun, anyway? The case
of a noun is another name for the form a noun takes. You have learned to
create two cases, the nominative singular
(villa) and the genitive singular (villae).
A noun will appear in one case or another depending on what
that noun is doing in that sentence. For example, if the noun is the subject
of the sentence it is in the nominative case,
as in this Latin sentence: Puella clamat.
( = The girl shouts.) If the noun were being acted upon by the subject,
it would probable be in the accusative
case, which you will learn later, as in this sentence: Regina
laudat puellam.
= (The queen praises the girl). |