Old English
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Middle English
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Post-medieval English
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Nominative case
Possessive case
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The common case
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The common case
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Dative case
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Dative case
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Accusative case
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Possessive case
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Possessive case
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It cannot be concluded that there are only two types of cases in modern English, of course, the remaining auxiliaries lose their main meaning over time, but can be expressed through the use of prepositions. For example, there are three theories of case categories: prepositional, limited, and positional.
According to G. Curme, B.A. Ilyish, prepositional prepositions are the combination of nouns with prepositions in a particular object and attributive collocation are forms of morphological conditions.
It is clear that the recognition of limited grammatical categories is limited. I. Smirnitsky, L.S. Barkhudarov and other scholars left an opposition point of view.
According to Bryant, M. Deutschbain, positional theory sentences are functional positions that the noun plays. It includes: possessive, non-inflectional, vocative, dative (indirect), accusative cases (direct object or prepositional).
In the modern Kazakh language, the case consists of атау, ілік, барыс, табыс, жатыс, шығыс, көмектес. These suffixes express a certain grammatical meaning through their own grammatical entities and perform a certain syntactic function in the sentence. According to the scientist of modern Turkic whose name is S. Isaev, there are two groups of cases: a) grammatical cases; b) volumetric cases (көлемдік септіктер).
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