Question
What are the two cases that follow prepositions in Latin?
Answers
GPT-4o mini
In Latin, the two cases that follow prepositions are the accusative case and the ablative case.
1. **Accusative case**: Used with prepositions that indicate motion towards something or a specific direction. Examples of such prepositions include "ad" (to), "in" (into), and "per" (through).
2. **Ablative case**: Used with prepositions that indicate separation, location, or certain other relationships. Examples of these prepositions include "in" (in/on/at, when indicating location), "cum" (with), "sine" (without), and "ex" (out of/from).
Each preposition is typically associated with either the accusative or ablative case, which dictates the form of the noun or pronoun that follows it.
1. **Accusative case**: Used with prepositions that indicate motion towards something or a specific direction. Examples of such prepositions include "ad" (to), "in" (into), and "per" (through).
2. **Ablative case**: Used with prepositions that indicate separation, location, or certain other relationships. Examples of these prepositions include "in" (in/on/at, when indicating location), "cum" (with), "sine" (without), and "ex" (out of/from).
Each preposition is typically associated with either the accusative or ablative case, which dictates the form of the noun or pronoun that follows it.