元となった辞書の項目
ablative case
noun
(grammar)
A
noun
case
used
in
some
languages
to
indicate
movement
away
from
something,
removal,
separation.
In
English
grammar,
it
corresponds
roughly
to
the
use
in
English
of
prepositions
"of",
"from",
"away
from",
and
"concerning".
In
Latin
grammar,
the
ablative
case
(cāsus
ablātīvus)
includes
functions
derived
from
the
Indo-European
ablative,
instrumental,
comitative,
associative
and
locative
cases;
these
cases
express
concepts
similar
to
those
of
the
English
prepositions
"of"/"from",
"by",
"with",
"to"/"with",
and
"at"/"in",
respectively.
Here/hence/hither,
there/thence/thither,
and
where/whence/whither
are
the
only
English
words
with
separate
forms
for
the
ablative
(motion
away
from)
and
lative
(motion
towards)
cases.
意味(1)
(grammar)
A
noun
case
used
in
some
languages
to
indicate
movement
away
from
something,
removal,
separation.
In
English
grammar,
it
corresponds
roughly
to
the
use
in
English
of
prepositions
"of",
"from",
"away
from",
and
"concerning".
In
Latin
grammar,
the
ablative
case
(cāsus
ablātīvus)
includes
functions
derived
from
the
Indo-European
ablative,
instrumental,
comitative,
associative
and
locative
cases;
these
cases
express
concepts
similar
to
those
of
the
English
prepositions
"of"/"from",
"by",
"with",
"to"/"with",
and
"at"/"in",
respectively.
Here/hence/hither,
there/thence/thither,
and
where/whence/whither
are
the
only
English
words
with
separate
forms
for
the
ablative
(motion
away
from)
and
lative
(motion
towards)
cases.