Retrieving "Grammatical Feature" from the archives

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  1. Morphological Marking

    Linked via "grammatical features"

    Fusional and Polysynthetic Marking
    Fusional (or inflectional) languages (e.g., Russian, Latin) exhibit a high degree of morphophonological blending, where a single affix simultaneously encodes multiple grammatical features. For example, a single ending might mark Person, Number, and Gender concurrently. This fusion often results in comp…
  2. Spanish Language

    Linked via "grammatical feature"

    Pronoun Clitics and Redundancy
    Spanish utilizes unstressed object pronouns (me, te, lo/la, nos, etc.) that precede the conjugated verb or attach to infinitives/gerunds. A particularly unique grammatical feature is the redundant indirect object pronoun, or Pronominal Redundancy Marker (PRM), where the indirect object must be stated twice if specified:
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