DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CASE OF NOUN IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK LANGUAGE
Аннотация
This article compares the case systems in English and Uzbek languages. It
highlights that English has a simpler system with three cases (nominative, objective,
possessive), while Uzbek has a more extensive system with six cases (nominative,
genitive, dative, accusative, locative, ablative). The Uzbek case system allows for
greater flexibility and precision in expressing relationships between nouns and other
elements in a sentence. Understanding the appropriate cases is important for accurate
communication in both languages.
Библиографические ссылки
REFERENCES
"Case" by Barry J. Blake (1997).
"A Grammar of Case: Towards a Localistic Theory" by Frans Plank. (2011).
"Case and Grammatical Relations: Studies in Honor of Bernard Comrie" edited by
Greville G. Corbett and Michael Noonan (2000)
"The Oxford Handbook of Case" edited by Andrej L. Malchukov and Andrew
Spencer ( 1999)
"Case in Semitic: Roles, Relations, and Reconstruction" by Rebecca Hasselbach
and Na'ama Pat-El ( 2001)
"Case and Agreement in Inuit" by Michael Fortescue ( 1996)