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dativelocative

Dativelocative is a term used in linguistic discussion to describe a proposed single-case category that encodes both the dative function (recipient or benefactive) and the locative function (location or direction). In a system with a dativelocative case, the same grammatical form would mark a noun as related to both giving and location, with interpretation depending on context. The concept is mainly used in typological theory and in discussions of case mergers rather than as a widely attested feature in natural languages.

In practice, languages more commonly express these meanings with separate markers or constructions. A dativelocative analysis

Attestation of a true dativelocative case in natural languages is scarce. Most languages maintain distinct dative

See also: dative case, locative case, allative, illative.

is
invoked
when
historical
or
synchronic
data
suggest
that
a
single
form
carries
both
senses,
or
when
a
language
exhibits
strong
alignment
between
recipient
and
location
in
certain
constructions.
Realizations,
when
discussed,
may
involve
a
single
suffix,
clitic,
or
postpositional
element
that
bears
combined
meaning,
with
its
exact
interpretation
negotiated
by
the
verb,
argument
structure,
and
surrounding
phrases.
and
locative
categories
or
use
multi-word
expressions
to
convey
the
combined
meaning.
When
proposed,
dativelocatives
appear
mainly
in
theoretical
grammars,
cross-linguistic
surveys,
or
constructed
languages,
where
analysts
treat
them
as
functional
fusions
or
as
instances
of
polysemy
rather
than
as
established
inherited
cases.
In
typology,
they
are
related
to
other
case
fusions
and
to
discussions
of
how
locational
and
recipient
semantics
interact.