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ablative absolute
noun
Latin Grammar.
- a construction not dependent upon any other part of the sentence, consisting of a noun and a participle, noun and adjective, or two nouns, in which both members are in the ablative case, as Latin viā factā, “the road having been made.”
ablative absolute
noun
- an absolute construction in Latin grammar in which a governor noun and a modifier in the ablative case function as a sentence modifier; for example, hostibus victis, "the enemy having been beaten"
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51Թ History and Origins
Origin of ablative absolute1
First recorded in 1520–30
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
“I liked the ablative absolute, the way it could wrap up entire epochs in two words, then move on,” she writes.
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Finding an ablative absolute, they are confident of finding some sort of proposition: and there it is, to their hand.
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Zamenhof states that the "ablative absolute" does not exist in Esperanto, as its use would be against the spirit of the language.
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An absolute construction, imitating the Latin ablative absolute.
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You will recognise this as an ablative absolute phrase.
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