Advertisement
Advertisement
ablative
1[ ab-luh-tiv ]
adjective
- (in some inflected languages) noting a case that has among its functions the indication of place from which or, as in Latin, place in which, manner, means, instrument, or agent.
noun
- the ablative case. : abl.
- a word in that case, as Troiā in Latin Aenēas Troiā vēnit, “Aeneas came from Troy.”
ablative
/ ˈæblətɪv /
adjective
- (in certain inflected languages such as Latin) denoting a case of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives indicating the agent in passive sentences or the instrument, manner, or place of the action described by the verb
noun
- the ablative case
- a word or speech element in the ablative case
- taking away or removing
ablative surgery
- able to disintegrate or be worn away at a very high temperature
a thick layer of ablative material
Other Words From
- ab·la·ti·val [ab-l, uh, -, tahy, -v, uh, l], adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of ablative1
Example Sentences
Its origin is involved in obscurity: but may it not be a corruption of the Latin ambages, or the singular ablative ambage?
The first three lines might have been expressed by an ablative absolute in two words—Troia euersa.
As in other Indo-Aryan languages, comparison is effected by putting the noun with which comparison is made in the ablative case.
When they come to die, they leave earth with but a single regret: they have never been able fully to compass the ablative.
Satis habere is in construction with an infinitive; contentum esse, generally with an ablative, or with quod.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse