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Alexandria
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Lettris
Lettris is a curious tetris-clone game where all the bricks have the same square shape but different content. Each square carries a letter. To make squares disappear and save space for other squares you have to assemble English words (left, right, up, down) from the falling squares.
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English dictionary
Main references
Most English definitions are provided by WordNet .
English thesaurus is mainly derived from The Integral Dictionary (TID).
English Encyclopedia is licensed by Wikipedia (GNU).
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The wordgames anagrams, crossword, Lettris and Boggle are provided by Memodata.
The web service Alexandria is granted from Memodata for the Ebay search.
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Translation
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1.any grammatical case other than the nominative
case[Classe]
grammar[Domaine]
Phrase[Domaine]
NounPhrase[Domaine]
grammatical category, syntactic category - case, grammatical case[Hyper.]
oblique, oblique case[Ant.]
grammar[Domaine]
NounPhrase[Domaine]
oblique case (n.)
In grammar, an oblique case (abbreviated OBL; Latin: casus generalis) is a noun (or pronoun) case that is used when the noun or pronoun is the object of either a verb or a preposition. A (pro)noun in the oblique case can generally appear in any role except as subject, for which the nominative case is used.[1] The term is occasionally contrasted with the objective case, which is used for objects of verbs and of prepositions, but not for genitive relations between nouns.
An oblique case often contrasts with an unmarked case, as in English oblique him and them vs. nominative he and they. However, the term oblique is also used for languages without a nominative case, such as ergative–absolutive languages; in the Northwest Caucasian languages, for example, the oblique-case marker serves to mark the ergative, dative, and applicative case roles, contrasting with the absolutive case, which is unmarked.
Bulgarian, an analytic Slavic language, also has an oblique case—or rather two of them, long and short—for pronouns:
Accusative role:
Dative role:
There is also one for masculine nouns with the article:
(This oblique case is a relic of the original, more complex proto-Slavic system of noun cases, and there are remnants of other cases in Bulgarian, such as the vocative case of direct address.)
An oblique/objective case appears in the English personal pronouns; these forms are often called object pronouns. One can observe how the first person pronoun me serves a variety of grammatical functions:
The pronoun me is not inflected differently in any of these uses; it is used for all grammatical relationships except the genitive case of possession (in standard English) and a non-disjunctive nominative case as the subject.
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