| 31. | Analytic, fusional, and agglutinative languages can all be found in many regions of the world.
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| 32. | The present internal disposition of the palace testifies to the agglutinative process by which the building evolved.
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| 33. | The Inuit language, like other Eskimo Aleut languages, exhibits a agglutinative and heavily suffixing morphology.
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| 34. | It is an agglutinative language which is remarkable for using a rare object verb subject word order.
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| 35. | He believed that these people spoke an agglutinative language from which the present Austroasiatic languages are derived.
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| 36. | Abaza, like its relatives in the family of Northwest Caucasian languages, is a highly agglutinative language.
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| 37. | Shoshone, for instance, are simply agglutinative, as their nouns stand mostly separate from their verbs.
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| 38. | It has vowel harmony, subject verb object word order, and agglutinative verbal morphology with some suppletion.
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| 39. | Noun phrase morphology is agglutinative and consists of suffixes which simply attach to the end of a stem.
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| 40. | Instead, the missionaries relied on the agglutinative nature of the language to formulate calque terms from native morphemes.
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