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Warrongo language
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==Nominal morphology== Nouns generally do not distinguish number or gender, while pronouns have different forms for [[Number (linguistics)|number]] (singular, dual and plural) and [[Grammatical person|person]] (first, second and third). All of them do, however, inflect for [[Grammatical case|case]]. The case suffixes have [[allomorph]]s according to the final phoneme of the stem, with some peculiarities exhibited by pronouns and by vowel-final proper and kin nouns .{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|pp=164β175}} There are also a few irregular nouns. ===Cases=== Nouns have a single form, unmarked by a suffix, for the [[nominative case]] (used for the subject of an intransitive verb) and the [[accusative case]] (used for the object of a transitive verb), while the [[ergative case]] (used for the subject of a transitive verb) is marked by a suffix. In pronouns, on the other hand, the nominative and the ergative coincide in the bare stem form, while the accusative is marked by a suffix. Exceptionally, the third person dual and plural pronouns, as well as vowel-final [[Proper noun|proper]] and kin nouns, receive separate marking for each of these three cases.{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|p=183}} The ergative, if used with inanimate nouns, may also mark an instrument.{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|p=188}} The [[locative case]] describes path or destination of movement, location, duration in time, instrument (and means), company ('together with'), and cause or reason. The [[dative case]] marks purpose, cause and reason, possession (rarely), goal and direction of movement, recipient, temporal duration or endpoint, a [[core argument]] in some syntactic constructions, and a [[Complement (linguistics)|complement]] of intransitives verbs or nouns like 'fond (of)', 'good (to)', 'know', 'forget'. The [[genitive]] is used only with animate nouns{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|p=201}} and marks, besides the typical possessor and related functions, also a beneficiary, recipient, or complement of some verbs and nouns. The [[ablative]] most commonly marks reason or a temporal or spatial starting point. The [[comitative]] seems to have a wide range of meanings, some of them idiomatic, but the most typical seem to correspond to English 'with'. Genitive, ablative and comitative suffixes may be followed by other case suffixes.{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|p=184}} Some adverbs can take case suffixes: locative (optionally for adverbs of place), dative (with the sense 'to', optionally for adverbs of place, obligatory for adverbs of time), or ablative (obligatory for both if the meaning is 'from, since').{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|p=179}} Adverbs of manner cannot take case suffixes β this distinguishes them from nouns that express similar meanings (as these nouns must agree in case with the nouns they modify).{{sfn|Tsunoda|2011|p=182}}
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