Subjective case
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The subjective case is the term preferred by English grammarians for the nominative case[citation needed]. Generally, when the term subjective case is used, the accusative and dative are collectively labelled as the objective case. This is possible in English because the two have merged; there are no surviving examples where the accusative and the dative are distinct in form, though their functions are still distinct. The genitive case is then usually called the possessive form and often is not considered as a noun case per se; English is then said to have two cases, the subjective and the objective. This view is an oversimplification, but it is didactically useful.
[edit] Examples
"Who told you that?" - Subjective Case
"Whose book is that?" - Possesive Case
"To whom did you tell that?" - Objective Case