Four cases – specifically the difference between nominative and accusative?
Her heart began to beat faster.
Decline the word heart.
Is the nominative the "tun" or does it describe "the action," or is this the case in the accusative case? I'm a bit confused right now, and I need to explain it to my child somehow. Thank you for the quick enlightenment in this grammar confusion.
the VERB describes the action, not the NOMEN!!!
Nominative:
Battery: ~the one that happens.
I will kick the football
I: the trader
step: the action, what happens
the football: the one to whom the action takes place that it must endure
ach yes: declining = put into 4 cases
heart, heart, heart(s), heart // hearts, hearts, hearts, hearts
Hello Howerd!
The special thing about substantive with the article “that” is that it is in the nominative and in the battery the same:
Nominative: The heart beats. Here you ask “who or what? -> The heart
Battery: I hear the heart. Here you ask “wen or what?” -> Also the heart.
Trying to make a set with nominative and one with a battery: the house, the girl, the cinema…
LG
gufrastella
the heart, the heart, the heart, the heart; N, G, D, A
“Your heart” is nominative in this sentence.
Who or what does something? > heart
There’s no accumulation.
because you can ask for the rechargeable also with “what” I was kind of irritated….what beats? the heart and so I suddenly ask in the nominative.
If you ask “What beats?” you ask for the nominative. This is the author of the action.
You can ask for everything with ‘what’, that doesn’t make the battery.