Pegative case
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistics, the Pegative case is used for a case marking that a noun is an agent of an action that has a dative-like undergoer argument. A marker of an agent of a transitive verb which has only a partial or low-intensity effect on the undergoer argument.
The case has been posited by Søren Wichmann for the Azoyú variety of the Tlapanec language which seems to be the only natural language to use such a case. Wichmann writes that he has "...based ‘Pegative’ on the Greek πηγή, which means ‘origin, source, emanation, etc.’ to provide a name for a case that proto-typically referes to a giver as opposed to a recipient" (Wichmann p16).