constructiecasus
Constructiecasus is a term used in linguistics, particularly within construction grammar, to describe a grammatical case or case-like marking that arises from construction-level semantics rather than solely from syntactic position. The name combines the Dutch words constructie (construction) and casus (case). In this framework, constructiecasus signals the role of a noun phrase inside a larger construction, such as a complex predicate or a multi-verb phrase, rather than within a single clause.
Origins and use: The notion emerged in discussions of how languages encode complex predicates and relations
Realization and function: In analyses that posit constructiecasus, the marking may appear as a suffix, a clitic,
Reception and research: Proponents argue that constructiecasus helps account for cross-linguistic variation in complex predicates. Critics