Locative case
From Wikinfo
The locative case (called prepositional case in Russian) is found in:
- in modern Baltic and Slavic languages
- some classical Indo-European languages, particularly Sanskrit and Latin
- in uncommon, archaic or literary use in certain modern Indian languages (such as Marathi in which a separate ablative case has however disappeared)
The locative case corresponds vaguely to the preposition "in", "at", or "by" of English and indicates a final location of action or a time of the action.
In languages such as Finnish, there is a set of six distinct locative cases that express different relationships to location.
See also
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Locative_case" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locative_case, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

