It is the Nominative, Vocative and Accusative Plural of 'Neck'
Gustavus Magnus has written: 'Analysis of picrosmine' -- subject(s): Determinative Mineralogy, Mineralogy, Determinative
My is the English equivalent of 'meus'. The possessive adjective is in the masculine nominative singular. The feminine and neuter forms are 'mea' and 'meum', respectively. 'Meus' can mean 'my' ('Os meus filhos' = 'My sons' or 'My kids'), or it can also mean 'mine' (Estes sapatos são meus' = 'These shoes are mine'), it always depends on how you use the adjective. My = meu, masculine nominative singular. My = minha, feminine nominative singular. My = meus, masculine nominative plural. My = minhas, feminine nominative plural.
H. R. Beringer has written: 'Simple determinative mineralogy' -- subject(s): Determinative Mineralogy
Islands. It's feminine nominative plural.
'parvu' means 'small', parva would be the feminine (nominative singular) form, or neuter plural (nominative or accusative). So Parva would mean small (feminine), or small things.
A nominative pronoun is the subject of a sentence. Examples of nominative pronouns are she, they, you, it, and he. A nominative case is the subject of the verb such as, he in the sentence "He eats pie."
It is difficult to know which word you mean without seeing the hieroglyphic version. Hieroglyphs did not record vowels, so the "a" and the "u" can not be correct; this leaves yrs, but there is no such word in Egyptian.If you substitute w for the u, you get yrsw, but there is still nothing like that in Egyptian.Leaving out the y, you get rsw and there are many different words written in that way:rsw + the "town" determinative = the south landrsw + the "sail" determinative = the south windrsw + the "eye" determinative = to watch, to guardrsw = vigilance (connected with previous word)
She/he is not a nominative pronoun. "She" and "he" are subjective or nominative pronouns, used as the subject of a sentence.
Nominative Case The nominative case is the form of a noun or pronoun used in the subject or predicate nominative. In English this is significant only with personal pronouns and the forms of who. Personal pronouns in the nominative case in modern English are I, you, he, she, it, we, and they. The word who is also in the nominative case.
George Richard Fansett has written: 'Field tests for the common metals' -- subject(s): Determinative Mineralogy, Mineralogy, Determinative
Eugen Hussak has written: 'Anleitung zum Bestimmen der gesteinbildenden Mineralien' -- subject(s): Determinative Mineralogy, Mineralogy, Determinative