Old Version (March 2007)
editIn linguistics, case government is government of the grammatical case of verb arguments, when a verb or preposition is said to 'govern' the grammatical case on its noun phrase complement, e.g. zu governs the dative case in German: zu mir 'to me-dative'. The German term for the notion is Rektion. Case government may modify the meaning of the verb substantially, even to meanings that are unrelated.
Case government is a more important notion in languages with many case distinctions, such as Russian and Finnish. It plays less of a role in English, because English doesn't rely on grammatical cases, except for distinguishing subject pronouns (I, he, she, we, they) from other pronouns (me, him, her, us, them). In English, true case government is absent, but if the aforementioned subject pronouns are understood as regular pronouns in the accusative case, it occurs in sentences such as He found me (not for example *He found I).
For example, in Finnish, a verb or sometimes even a particular meaning of a verb is associated with a case the referent noun must be in. "To go for a walk" is expressed as mennä kävelylle (literally 'to go to a walk'), where mennä means 'to go', kävely is 'a walk' and -lle is a postfix that denotes the allative case (usually means 'to' in English). This case must be always used in this context; one cannot say *mennä kävelyyn 'to go into a walk', for example.
New version
editIn linguistics, case government is government of the grammatical case of the noun argument of a verb or adposition. Verbs and adpositions are said to 'govern' the grammatical case of a noun phrase complement, meaning that they control which grammatical case the noun is inflected for.
In verbs
editAdpositions
editGerman
editIn Standard German, there are prepositions which govern each of the three oblique cases: Accusative, Dative, and Genitive. Case marking in German is largely observed on elements which modify the noun (e.g. determiners, adjectives). In the following table, examples of Löffel 'spoon' (Masculine), Messer 'knife' (Neuter), and Gabel 'fork' (Feminine) are in definite noun phrases for each of the four cases. In the oblique cases (i.e. non-Nominative), the prepositions supplied dictate different cases: ohne 'without' governs the accusative, mit 'with' governs the dative, and wegen 'because of' governs the genitive:[1]
Case | Gender | ||
---|---|---|---|
Masculine | Neuter | Feminine | |
Nominative |
der the.M.NOM Löffel spoon 'the spoon' |
das the.N.NOM Messer knife 'the knife' |
die the.F.NOM Gabel fork 'the fork' |
Accusative |
ohne without den the.M.ACC Löffel spoon 'without the spoon' |
ohne without das the.N.ACC Messer knife 'without the knife' |
ohne without die the.F.ACC Gabel fork 'without the fork' |
Dative |
mit with dem the.M.DAT Löffel spoon 'with the spoon' |
mit with dem the.N.DAT Messer knife 'with the knife' |
mit with der the.F.DAT Gabel fork 'with the fork' |
Genitive |
wegen because.of des the.M.GEN Löffel-s spoon-M.GEN 'because of the spoon' |
wegen because.of des the.N.GEN Messer-s knife-N.GEN 'because of the knife' |
wegen because.of der the.F.GEN Gabel fork 'because of the fork |
There are also two-way prepositions which govern the dative when the prepositional phrase denotes location (where at?), but dative when it denotes direction (to/from where?).
a. |
in in sein-em his-M.DAT Palast palace 'in his palace' |
b. |
in in sein-en his-M.NOM Palast palace 'into his palace' |
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Russian
edit- ^ Due to the increasing rarity of the genitive in colloquial speech, prepositions governing the genitive may colloquially take on the dative.