The abessive case is a grammatical case used to express the absence or lack of something - the same effect of using the English preposition "without" or the suffix "-less". It is a case used by languages such as Estonian and Finnish.
An abessive is a word in the abessive case - a grammatical case in languages such as Finnish and Estonian whose words imply the lack or absence of something.
As an adjective, abessive means "of of relating to the grammatical case which indicates absence".
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern AB-SS---. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter A and 2nd letter B and 4th letter S and 5th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: abessive
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 4 words with the pattern --E-SIV-. That is, eight letter words with 3rd letter E and 5th letter S and 6th letter I and 7th letter V. In alphabetical order, they are: abessive adessive aversive inessive
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern -BES-IV-. That is, eight letter words with 2nd letter B and 3rd letter E and 4th letter S and 6th letter I and 7th letter V. In alphabetical order, they are: abessive
Both. "Case sensitive" means that upper case and lower case characters are treated as different characters.
case = grammatical case -> Fall, Kasus case = box -> Kiste, Kasten case = instance, legal case -> Fall case = situation -> Umstand
Egg case? There's no egg cases but there is a coin case, seal case,fashion case and poffin case.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 4 words with the pattern A-E--IVE. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter A and 3rd letter E and 6th letter I and 7th letter V and 8th letter E. In alphabetical order, they are: abessive adessive agentive aversive
If a case is "Nolle Prosequied" by a prosecutor, that is considered a "dropped" case. A dropped case is different from a dismissed case. Only a judge can 'Dismiss" a case.
mahadev app case
A droped case