| 1. | Because of this case marking, the word order can be quite free.
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| 2. | Case marking using enclitics also occurs for Dative, Locative, and Genitive cases.
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| 3. | It has a split-ergative case marking system, consistent with neighbouring languages.
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| 4. | For morphosyntactic alignment, many Australian languages have nominative accusative case marking.
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| 5. | Heads and modifiers can be distinguished by their ability to take case marking.
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| 6. | Considering this argument, why then do noun phrases receive genitive Case marking in English?
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| 7. | Thus, if there is no case marking, one can resort to the word order.
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| 8. | It shows case marking with an ergative alignment in the past tense, nominative-accusative elsewhere.
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| 9. | Lastly, there is case marking reserved for non-focused non-agent / experiencer roles in the clause.
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| 10. | The agent also loses ergative case marking as an adjunct and acquires ablative case instead.
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