Partitivus
Partitivus, partridge - case in some language groups (eg in Finnish). It represents an uncountable quantity of the designatum or occurs with numerals, indicating that the subject is part of a whole.
In Polish, the equivalent of this case is genetivus partitivus, indicating an unspecified amount of designatum in the supplement, eg when a glass of water stands on the table and tells our interlocutor to drink water (accusative water), we mean to drink all the water that is in the glass; But if we use genetivus partitivus and say, "Drink a little water, we mean just to drink a little." Finnish language
Partitivus is one of the most important cases. It is created using the suffix -a / -ä-: maito-maitoa, tyttötttöä or -ta / -tä-: avain - avainta, tie - tietä. It means a number of designata, eg yksi kissa (denominator) - kaksi kissaa (partitivus). It can act as a subject and as a fulfillment. Russian
In Russian, when the genitive refers to an object that is only part of a whole, the term "-u" ("acid") is traditionally used to mean "not acid" was drunk), although according to the linguistic norms the Russian derivative has a tip on -a (нет кваса, 'nott kwasa').
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