| 41. | In all Indo-Aryan languages, the dative postposition is by origin the locative of some genitive one.
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| 42. | Whereas the reciprocal possessive form of nouns is obsolete, the reciprocal object of postpositions remains in common use.
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| 43. | Morphemes in Galice can be placed in one of four categories : stems, prefixes, postpositions and enclitics.
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| 44. | In Achaemenid Elamite, postpositions become more common and partly, but not entirely, displace this type of construction.
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| 45. | They act as the object of a postposition in a manner similar to an ordinary noun suffixed with a postposition.
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| 46. | They act as the object of a postposition in a manner similar to an ordinary noun suffixed with a postposition.
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| 47. | In addition to the simple postpositions there are more complex forms of the relational type that express more specific relationships.
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| 48. | Each postposition governs ( requires ) a specific case of the noun, akin to the usage of prepositions in Latin.
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| 49. | In Japanese, a language that indicates noun functions with postpositions, the topic marker ( wa ) may include definiteness.
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| 50. | Nominal cases in Tlingit are designated by postpositions as with most SOV languages, however they usually behave morphologically like suffixes.
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