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    Case \Case\, n. [F. cas, fr. L. casus, fr. cadere to fall, to
    happen. Cf. {Chance}.]
    1. Chance; accident; hap; opportunity. [Obs.]

    By aventure, or sort, or cas. --Chaucer.

    2. That which befalls, comes, or happens; an event; an
    instance; a circumstance, or all the circumstances;
    condition; state of things; affair; as, a strange case; a
    case of injustice; the case of the Indian tribes.

    In any case thou shalt deliver him the pledge.
    --Deut. xxiv.
    13.

    If the case of the man be so with his wife. --Matt.
    xix. 10.

    And when a lady's in the case
    You know all other things give place. --Gay.

    You think this madness but a common case. --Pope.

    I am in case to justle a constable, --Shak.

    3. (Med. & Surg.) A patient under treatment; an instance of
    sickness or injury; as, ten cases of fever; also, the
    history of a disease or injury.

    A proper remedy in hypochondriacal cases.
    --Arbuthnot.

    4. (Law) The matters of fact or conditions involved in a
    suit, as distinguished from the questions of law; a suit
    or action at law; a cause.

    Let us consider the reason of the case, for nothing
    is law that is not reason. --Sir John
    Powell.

    Not one case in the reports of our courts. --Steele.

    5. (Gram.) One of the forms, or the inflections or changes of
    form, of a noun, pronoun, or adjective, which indicate its
    relation to other words, and in the aggregate constitute
    its declension; the relation which a noun or pronoun
    sustains to some other word.

    Case is properly a falling off from the nominative
    or first state of word; the name for which, however,
    is now, by extension of its signification, applied
    also to the nominative. --J. W. Gibbs.

    Note: Cases other than the nominative are oblique cases. Case
    endings are terminations by which certain cases are
    distinguished. In old English, as in Latin, nouns had
    several cases distinguished by case endings, but in
    modern English only that of the possessive case is
    retained.

    {Action on the case} (Law), according to the old
    classification (now obsolete), was an action for redress
    of wrongs or injuries to person or property not specially
    provided against by law, in which the whole cause of
    complaint was set out in the writ; -- called also
    {trespass on the case}, or simply {case}.

    {All a case}, a matter of indifference. [Obs.] ``It is all a
    case to me.'' --L'Estrange.

    {Case at bar}. See under {Bar}, n.

    {Case divinity}, casuistry.

    {Case lawyer}, one versed in the reports of cases rather than
    in the science of the law.

    {Case stated} or {Case agreed on} (Law), a statement in
    writing of facts agreed on and submitted to the court for
    a decision of the legal points arising on them.

    {A hard case}, an abandoned or incorrigible person. [Colloq.]


    {In any case}, whatever may be the state of affairs; anyhow.


    {In case}, or {In case that}, if; supposing that; in the
    event or contingency; if it should happen that. ``In case
    we are surprised, keep by me.'' --W. Irving.

    {In good case}, in good condition, health, or state of body.


    {To put a case}, to suppose a hypothetical or illustrative
    case.

    Syn: Situation, condition, state; circumstances; plight;
    predicament; occurrence; contingency; accident; event;
    conjuncture; cause; action; suit.

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