kasusmarkering
Kasusmarkering, or case marking, is a linguistic phenomenon in which languages mark noun phrases to indicate their grammatical roles in sentences. Markers may be affixes (suffixes, prefixes, or circumfixes), internal vowel changes (abla), or separate words such as prepositions or articles that attach to the noun phrase or determine its relation to the verb. Some languages rely predominantly on morphology, while others use word order and prepositions to signal case.
The most common cases include nominative (subject of a verb), accusative (direct object), genitive (possession), and
In typology, case marking interacts with syntactic alignment. Nominative-accusative languages mark the subject of intransitive and
Case marking supports flexible word order, disambiguates the thematic roles, and encodes grammatical information such as