Allativedativelike
Allativedativelike is a linguistic descriptor used to refer to a case or case-like marking that combines allative (motion toward a goal) and dative (indirect recipient or beneficiary) meanings in a single grammatical element. The term is used primarily in typological and historical studies to discuss markers that encode both destination and recipient in contexts such as transfer verbs (give, send, show) or benefactive constructions. In a language with an allativedativelike marker, a noun or pronoun may bear one morpheme that signals “toward X” and “for X,” or a postposed clitic that is licensed by ditransitive verbs.
Realization and distribution: The marker may be suffixal on the noun, attached to the verb as a
Typology and development: Allativedativelike markers are relatively rare and often emerge through grammaticalization, where a fossilized
See also: allative case, dative case, directional case, locative, ditransitive constructions.