| 1. | This is because Georgian has yet another level of split ergativity.
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| 2. | In both Georgian, ergativity only occurs in the perfective.
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| 3. | Cambridge University Press and " Ergativity ".
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| 4. | Languages from Australia, New Guinea and Tibetan have been shown to have optional ergativity.
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| 5. | The perfective aspect thus displays split ergativity.
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| 6. | Many other languages have limited ergativity.
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| 7. | Other grammatical features include postpositions, relator nouns, accusative; ergativity has not been found.
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| 8. | English has derivational morphology that parallels ergativity in that it operates on intransitive verbs and objects of transitive verbs.
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| 9. | If there is no case marking, ergativity can be marked through other means, such as in verbal morphology.
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| 10. | "' Split ergativity "'is shown by languages that have a partly accusative, in some contexts.
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