Oblique Case


Categories:  Case

There are generally two scenarios where this occurs:

1) Translates to "to/at/on ___". For personal pronouns that comprise two words (the case marker and the "actual pronoun") the case marker is required here.
2) As another possessive, sharing role with the genitive case that follows nouns, but behaves like an adjective and typically goes before the noun being possessed instead of after for genitive. For personal pronouns that comprise two words, the case marker is typically removed. On the other hand, some languages have different forms for this scenario to the previous scenario; those different forms for this scenario will belong to possessive pronouns instead.

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