For the Personal pronoun (first, second or third person references), the Accusative case deals with a person (or object) which is the recipient of an action:
For example, “they” in English is nominative; “them” is accusative. The sentence “They like them” shows the nominative case and accusative case working in conjunction using the same base word. The syntactic functions of the accusative consist of designating the immediate object of an action, the intended result, the goal of a motion, and the extent of an action.
In Romanian, the Accusative is made up of a preposition, and a pronoun (which changes for first and second from the nominative)
The accusative Case is used mostly with the prepositions:
The prepositions go before the accusative pronoun:
English Pronoun | Personal Pronoun (nominative) | Accusative Pronoun |
---|---|---|
me | Eu | mine |
you | Tu | tine |
him/her | El / Ea | el/ea |
us | Noi | noi |
you | Voi | voi |
them | Ei / Ele | ei / ele |
To as whom is the object of something (to accuse someone), you add cine after the preposition, omitting the pronoun:
When dealing with a Pronoun (a word that substitutes for a noun or noun phrase) in the Accusative case things change.
The pattern is:
Note: The Emphasis follows the same pattern as the Accusative Pronoun for the “Personal Pronoun in the Accusative Case” (above).
English | Simple Form | verb | Emphasis |
---|---|---|---|
me | Mă | verb | pe mine |
you | Te | verb | pe tine |
him/her | Îl / O | verb | pe el/ea |
us | Ne | verb | pe noi |
you | Vă | verb | pe voi |
them | Îl / Le | verb | pe ei / ele |
Examples: