I don't have enough context to provide an accurate overview. The context provided only says "grammatical case" without any specific information about nominative case itself. To write an accurate overview based only on the provided context, I would need additional details about what nominative case is and its function.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
In grammar, the nominative case (abbreviated nom), subjective case, straight case, or upright case is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb, or (in Latin and formal variants of English) a predicative nominal or adjective, as opposed to its object, or other verb arguments. Generally, the noun "that is doing something" is in the nominative, and the nominative is often the form listed in dictionaries.
Etymology
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).