Case terms 15.06.2026

Terminological principles

Most traditional terms designating cases and adpositions are Latin-based (some are Greek, some of 21st cent. provenience are English). A new term should fit in existent terminology. Therefore, the first requirement for a new case term is that it be Latinate.1

Most traditional case terms are derived from verbs, more precisely, from the perfect participle of some plurivalent verb. The term formation presupposes a construction in which the nominal expression marked by the case in question has some oblique syntactic function vis-à-vis that verb. Here are a few examples:

casepropositionmeaning
dativeX dat Y C-dativeX gives Y to C
ablativeX aufert Y a C-ablativeX takes Y away from C
benefactiveX bene facit C-dativeX does well to C

The first two examples illustrate the model literally. The third example shows that it is used for languages other than Latin independently of the existence of the case in question in Latin. The point here is that in the valency of the name-giving verb, the case to be named is born by some oblique dependent C; it is not the subject X. This is the principle by which new case terms are assessed.

Specimen: the caritive

An interesting example is provided by the name for the caritive case. Apart from caritive, this case has been named abessive and privative. These terms originate in separate philological traditions, designate similar phenomena and are treated as synonymous by some linguists (including the English wikipedia 2021). They all refer to a situation where C is absent from X or from the situation whose protagonist X is. In other words, X lacks C or is without C. The following is an attempt at a differentiation which pays attention to

  1. the meaning of these Latinate terms
  2. the distribution and function of the formatives and the structure of the constructions in question.

Ad #1:

The Latin ablative, with or without the preposition a(b), marks a nominal clause component from which something is separated. Since Latin lacks an abessive/caritive/privative case, this is the closest that Latin can muster in this semantic area. In all three paraphrases, C is the entity so marked.

Ad #2:

is a typical example of the caritive.

.Itk-i-nsyy-ttä.
Finnishweep-PST-1.SGreason-CAR
I cried for no reason.

1 A well known Greek-based term is ergative. An unknown example is metexitive, a term used for some years to name an unparalleled case of the Cabecar language. It was replaced by dispositive mainly for the reason that case terms are Latin-based.


Reference

Trubetzkoy, Nikolaj S. 1939, Grundzüge der Phonologie. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (TCLP, 7)