accusativus cum infinitivo

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1)  A syntactic construction, very common in, in which the  of a  is declined for the  case and the verb is conjugated for the  mood,  to express  statements.
 * 2) * ibidem, page 11:
 * Thus we must differentiate between the accusativi cum infinitivis after the two groups of verbs already on account of this, although this has not been thought necessary by anybody so far.
 * 1) * 1982, Haiim B. Rosén, East and West: Selected Writings in Linguistics, part one: General and Indo-European Linguistics, : Wilhelm Fink Verlag, ISBN 3770520904 (10), ISBN 9783770520909 (13), page 427:
 * In all these occurrences, after the clause ἔδοξεν tῲ dήμῳ (lʿ m ṣdnm tm), we find a nominal clause without a verbal subject; in these instances the accusativi cum infinitivis which give the detailed content of the decree are to be seen […]
 * 1) * ibidem, page 428:
 * Not only are all the verbs in the infinitive, since these sentences are, from a syntactical point of view, accusativi cum infinitivis, but also the continuation of the sentence comes in the words ʿ ṭrt ḥrṣ after a long parenthesis; both of these constructions are completely foreign to the nature of Semitic paratactic syntax.
 * Not only are all the verbs in the infinitive, since these sentences are, from a syntactical point of view, accusativi cum infinitivis, but also the continuation of the sentence comes in the words ʿ ṭrt ḥrṣ after a long parenthesis; both of these constructions are completely foreign to the nature of Semitic paratactic syntax.

Translations

 * Icelandic: þolfall með nafnhætti
 * Serbo-Croatian: akuzativ s infinitivom