Suffixaufnahme
|
Suffixaufnahme (German for "suffix-absorption") is a linguistic phenomenon whereby a genitive noun declines to match its head noun, and vice-versa. It is present in Old Georgian and some other Caucasian and ancient Middle Eastern languages, and almost invariably coincides with agglutinativity.
A subject, for instance, would be marked with a subjective affix as well as a genitive affix. In the sentence "The dog's tongue is blue", the word "tongue" would have a subjective affix, whereas "dog" would have both a subjective affix and a genitive affix.
A noun possessing another noun that possesses a noun would be marked with a subjective affix and two genitive affixes, to indicate that it is possessing a possessive. For example, in the sentence "The doctor's dog's tongue was blue", the word "doctor" would have a subject affix and two genitive affixes.
Contents |
Languages with suffixaufnahme
Living languages
Dead Languages
Ancient languages
See also
External links
- Paper on suffixaufnahme (http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/people/Kracht/html/suffixaufnahme.pdf) (in PDF format)
- Abstract to "Double Case: Agreement by Suffixaufnahme" (http://www.linguistlist.org/aristar/aufnahme.html)