In forms like Claudio's house or Claudio's dogs, are there languages in which the Claudio's would change depending on gender and number of the houses or dogs?
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In Romani, the genitive case marker looks something like -kVrV or -gVrV, where V depends on the gender (and I believe number) of the object. So for instance, you have
where kher is neuter and vudar is masculine. |
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In Hindi and Urdu, the genitive particle is ka (masc), ki (fem), agreeing with the possessed. |
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In most Grassfields Bantu languages of Cameroon, there is an associative morpheme which agrees with the possessed noun in a genitive construction. In the most minimal type of agreement, the associative marker is a floating low tone for noun classes 1 and 9, and a floating high tone otherwise. Noni, a Beboid language, has eighteen different genitive markers, depending on the noun class of the possessed noun (Hyman 1981: 19). A mixed case is Nkwen, of the Ngemba group of Grassfields, which has a segmental genitive marker for classes 2, 5, 6 and 19 (agreeing with the possessed), a floating low tone genitive marker for classes 1 and 9, and a floating high tone marker for other classes. (Ncheafor 2002) |
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Most Slavic languages have such inflection form. It applies both nouns and pronouns and both possessor and possessed inflect in agreement. My samples would be in Ukrainian. PronounsPron. 1st: Я "My son" (nominative/genitive/dative, other cases skipped): "My daughter" (nom./gen./dat.): Plural form: "my sons and daughters": NounsNouns (possessor) are inflected in a similar way: "Ivan's son" and "Ivan's sons" (nom./gen./dat.): "Ivan's daughter" (nom./gen./dat.): There's yet another way of forming possessive by placing the possessor at the end. This way, only possessed inflect while the possessor remains in genitive case only: син Івана / сина Івана / сину Івана |
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Your question doesn't specify whether you are interested just in nouns or also in pronouns or adjectives. In Spanish these forms of the possessive/genitive adjectives/pronouns (terminology depends on analysis/tradition) are inflected for number, and some also for gender, to agree with the possessed rather than with the possessor:
This is common among Romance languages. |
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