Dear all,
From the Sutta Itivuttaka no 7:
Sabbaṃ, bhikkhave, anabhijānaṃ aparijānaṃ tattha cittaṃ avirājayaṃ appajahaṃ abhabbo dukkhakkhayāya
Monks! not super-knowing, not full-understanding All, thence with undetached, not-giving-up mind, he is incapable of destroying suffering
It seems the Accusative bulk (Sabbaṃ anabhijānaṃ aparijānaṃ tattha cittaṃ avirājayaṃ appajahaṃ) is used adverbially. However, I could not refer it to any function of the Accusative case - as most of textbooks indicate. It could not be Accusative Absolute, cause here the verbal nouns were used not participles. It could not be kind of ellipsis too - I guessed - if it is ellipsis, it means there were so much words left out.
Here one possible proposal - I think - is: (cittaṃ) takes Nominative case, not Accusative and the group (Sabbaṃ anabhijānaṃ aparijānaṃ) attributes to it. So, the Nominative (abhabbo) will be predicate of (cittaṃ). All the same, according to my intuition, I do not see it convinced. Moreover, the particle (tattha) seems to divide the sentence grammatically so that (cittaṃ) was not combined with the first bulk.
Please give me your advices.
Sincerely yours,
Huynh Trong Khanh