It can be found in partitive case in Finnish language. One of its uses in Finnish is to express a part of a larger object, or a subset of a group of several objects.
An example in Finnish would be the difference between the use of partitive and accusative:
+Finnish examples !Phrase !Case !Translation !Literal meaning | |||
Minä syön omenaa. | Part. sing. | I am eating an apple. | I am eating a part of an apple. |
Minä syön omenan. | Acc. sing. | I eat an apple. | I eat a whole apple. |
Minä söin omenia. | Part. pl. | I was eating apples. | I was eating some apples. |
Minä söin omenat. | Acc. pl. | I ate apples. | I ate the whole set of apples. |
Finnish influenced J.R.R. Tolkien in inventing his fictional language Quenya, being present in that language as one of four grammatical numbers in Quenya, the others being singular, dual, and plural.
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