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'''Perlative case''' ([[list of glossing abbreviations|abbreviated]] {{sc|'''per'''}}) "expresses that something moved 'through', 'across', or 'along' the referent of the noun that is marked"<ref>[http://wiki.linguistlist.org/ontowiki/GOLDRevisions/Perlative_Case Article "Perlative Case"] on the [http://linguistlist.org/ Linguist list] [http://wiki.linguistlist.org/ wiki]</ref>. The case is found in the [[List of Australian Aboriginal languages|West Australian]] [[Kuku-Yalanji language]]<ref>Robert Malcolm Ward Dixon, ''Australian Languages: their nature and development'', page 532, [http://books.google.com/books?id=g1Q4jNdoEVoC&pg=PA532&ots=1V1CyLqchg&dq=%22perlative+case%22+noun&sig=rVv13U4JJFOCeLPJDRCZI_rN6ZU Google books search] 2002, 776 pages</ref>, [[Aymara]] and in [[Tocharian languages|Tocharian]].
'''Perlative case''' ([[list of glossing abbreviations|abbreviated]] {{sc|'''per'''}}) "expresses that something moved 'through', 'across', or 'along' the referent of the noun that is marked"<ref>[http://wiki.linguistlist.org/ontowiki/GOLDRevisions/Perlative_Case Article "Perlative Case"] on the [http://linguistlist.org/ Linguist list] [http://wiki.linguistlist.org/ wiki]</ref>. The case is found in the [[List of Australian Aboriginal languages|West Australian]] [[Kuku-Yalanji language]]<ref>Robert Malcolm Ward Dixon, ''Australian Languages: their nature and development'', page 532, [http://books.google.com/books?id=g1Q4jNdoEVoC&pg=PA532&ots=1V1CyLqchg&dq=%22perlative+case%22+noun&sig=rVv13U4JJFOCeLPJDRCZI_rN6ZU Google books search] 2002, 776 pages</ref>, [[Aymara_declension]] and in [[Tocharian languages|Tocharian]].


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 06:19, 12 June 2011

Perlative case (abbreviated PER) "expresses that something moved 'through', 'across', or 'along' the referent of the noun that is marked"[1]. The case is found in the West Australian Kuku-Yalanji language[2], Aymara_declension and in Tocharian.

References

  1. ^ Article "Perlative Case" on the Linguist list wiki
  2. ^ Robert Malcolm Ward Dixon, Australian Languages: their nature and development, page 532, Google books search 2002, 776 pages