case$11682$ - meaning and definition. What is case$11682$
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What (who) is case$11682$ - definition

ONE OF TWO OPTIONS FOR TAKING INTO ACCOUNT ALL DIFFERENCES OF LETTER CASE WHEN COMPARING OR SEARCHING FOR TEXTS (EXAMPLE: CASE SENSITIVE COMPARISON OF "DOG" WITH "DOG" RETURNS "DIFFERENT")
Case-sensitive; Case sensitive; Smash case; Case-insensitive; Case Sensitivity; Case insensitive; Case insensitivity; Case insensitiv; Case sensitiv; Case-sensitiv; Case-insensitiv; Case-sensitivity; Case Sensitive

Case system         
  • Балахн'''е'''}}'')'' is in the dative case in ''Balakhne 500 Let'' ('Balakhna is 500 years old', literally '[There is] 500 years to Balakhna') on the front of the sign. Furthermore, ''let'' is in the genitive (plural) case.
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY WHOSE VALUE REFLECTS THE GRAMMATICAL FUNCTION PERFORMED BY A NOUN OR PRONOUN IN A PHRASE, CLAUSE, OR SENTENCE
Noun case; Case (linguistics); Case (grammar); Case ending; Grammatical cases; Case system; Case endings; Case (language); Case marking; Morphological case; Noun cases; Language case; English cases; Noun cases in English; Cases (grammar)
·add. ·- The system of teaching law in which the instruction is primarily a historical and inductive study of leading or selected cases, with or without the use of textbooks for reference and collateral reading.
Grammatical case         
  • Балахн'''е'''}}'')'' is in the dative case in ''Balakhne 500 Let'' ('Balakhna is 500 years old', literally '[There is] 500 years to Balakhna') on the front of the sign. Furthermore, ''let'' is in the genitive (plural) case.
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY WHOSE VALUE REFLECTS THE GRAMMATICAL FUNCTION PERFORMED BY A NOUN OR PRONOUN IN A PHRASE, CLAUSE, OR SENTENCE
Noun case; Case (linguistics); Case (grammar); Case ending; Grammatical cases; Case system; Case endings; Case (language); Case marking; Morphological case; Noun cases; Language case; English cases; Noun cases in English; Cases (grammar)
A grammatical case is a category of nouns and noun modifiers (determiners, adjectives, participles, and numerals), which corresponds to one or more potential grammatical functions for a nominal group in a wording. In various languages, nominal groups consisting of a noun and its modifiers belong to one of a few such categories.
case system         
  • Балахн'''е'''}}'')'' is in the dative case in ''Balakhne 500 Let'' ('Balakhna is 500 years old', literally '[There is] 500 years to Balakhna') on the front of the sign. Furthermore, ''let'' is in the genitive (plural) case.
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY WHOSE VALUE REFLECTS THE GRAMMATICAL FUNCTION PERFORMED BY A NOUN OR PRONOUN IN A PHRASE, CLAUSE, OR SENTENCE
Noun case; Case (linguistics); Case (grammar); Case ending; Grammatical cases; Case system; Case endings; Case (language); Case marking; Morphological case; Noun cases; Language case; English cases; Noun cases in English; Cases (grammar)
n. the method of studying law generally used in American law schools, in which the students read, outline (brief), discuss and hear lectures about the cases. Each case presented stands for a particular rule of law in the subject matter covered and is contained in "casebooks" on particular topics (contracts, torts, criminal law, constitutional law, agency, etc.). The system is useful since it relates the law to real and factual situations which assist students in memorization and encourages deductive reasoning. The case system is reinforced by textbooks and outlines on the subject matter, which were formerly the principal sources of learning. The method was introduced first at Harvard in 1869 by professor Christopher C. Langdell and soon became standard.

Wikipedia

Case sensitivity

In computers, case sensitivity defines whether uppercase and lowercase letters are treated as distinct (case-sensitive) or equivalent (case-insensitive). For instance, when users interested in learning about dogs search an e-book, "dog" and "Dog" are of the same significance to them. Thus, they request a case-insensitive search. But when they search an online encyclopedia for information about the United Nations, for example, or something with no ambiguity regarding capitalization and ambiguity between two or more terms cut down by capitalization, they may prefer a case-sensitive search.