Retrieving "Grammatical Feature" from the archives
Cross-reference notes under review
While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.
-
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… -
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:
$…