An ending of the illative always ends with " n " in the singular, and " sna " is the final part of an ending of the illative in the plural.
22.
In the study of illative ( deductive ) combinatory logic, Curry in 1941 recognized the implication of the paradox as implying that, without restrictions, the following properties of a combinatory logic are incompatible:
23.
This is the origin of the three-way systems as the three different ones in Karelian Finnish ( illative / inessive / elative, allative / adessive / ablative, translative / essive / excessive ).
24.
:The peripheral cases include things like illative, expressing motion into ( into a house ), or abessive, expressing a lack ( without a house ), that are found, for example, in Finnish grammar.
25.
In modern Finnish, it has been superseded by a more complicated system of locative cases and enclitics, and the original-s has merged with another lative or locative suffix and turned into the modern inessive, elative, illative and even translative suffixes.
26.
The illative marker is "-j " in the singular and "-da " in the plural, which is preceded by the plural marker "-i ", making it look the same as the plural accusative.
27.
The always regular "-sse " illative ending is a newer innovation, and can sometimes have a slightly different meaning than the old " short form " illative, the later having the concrete locative meaning ( e . g . : " tuppa "'into the room'), and the former being used in other structures that require the illative ( " mis puutub toasse "'concerning the room . . .').
28.
The always regular "-sse " illative ending is a newer innovation, and can sometimes have a slightly different meaning than the old " short form " illative, the later having the concrete locative meaning ( e . g . : " tuppa "'into the room'), and the former being used in other structures that require the illative ( " mis puutub toasse "'concerning the room . . .').
29.
The always regular "-sse " illative ending is a newer innovation, and can sometimes have a slightly different meaning than the old " short form " illative, the later having the concrete locative meaning ( e . g . : " tuppa "'into the room'), and the former being used in other structures that require the illative ( " mis puutub toasse "'concerning the room . . .').
30.
In the end, the types of generalizations that can be made are that some inflectional categories always take the strong form ( e . g . partitive plural, "-ma " infinitive ), some always take the weak form ( e . g . "-tud " participle ), some forms may take the overlong form ( some partitive singulars, short illative singular ), while other inflectional categories are underdetermined for whether they occur with weak or strong grade.