: the accusative case of a language : a form in the accusative case
Example Sentences
Noun a noun in the accusative
Recent Examples on the Web
Adjective
Young Audre thrived underneath and in spite of her mother’s accusative, watchful eye. Emily Bernard, The New Republic, 25 Mar. 2021
Word History
Etymology
Adjective
Middle English accusatif, borrowed from Anglo-French, borrowed from Latin accūsātīvus, from accūsātus (past participle of accūsāre "to find fault with, accuse") + -īvus-ive
Note:Accūsātīvus is the Latin translation of Greek (ptôsis) aitiatikḗ; the early Roman grammarians who coined it presumably had in mind the verb aitiâsthai, which means both "to accuse, censure" and "to allege as the cause." The base of aitiâsthai is aitía, which corresponds approximately in meaning with causa, the base of accūsāre. Nonetheless, if ptôsis aitiatikḗ is the "causal case," cāsus accūsātīvus does not really convey the same idea, and the translation is more apt etymologically than literally.
Noun
Middle English accusatif, borrowed from Anglo-French, borrowed from Latin accūsātīvus, from accūsātīvusaccusative entry 1