Inflected preposition
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In some languages, an inflected preposition, or conjugated preposition, is a word formed from the contraction of a preposition with a personal pronoun. For instance, in Scottish, to say "before him," one would not say ro e, but roimhe, an amalgamation of the two words. Conjugated prepositions are commonly reanalysed as inflected words by native speakers and by traditional grammar.
The term prepositional pronoun is also used sometimes for inflected preposition, but this may cause confusion with another sense of this expression. (See prepositional pronoun.)
Inflected prepositions are found in the Insular Celtic languages (including Scottish Gaelic, Irish, Welsh, and Breton) and in many Semitic languages including Hebrew and Arabic.
Languages that do not have full paradigms of inflected prepositions may allow contraction of prepositions and pronouns to a more limited extent. In Polish, for instance, a handful of common prepositions allow amalgamated forms (in formal registers) with 3rd person pronouns: na niego ("on him/it") → nań.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Swan, Oscar E. (2002). A Grammar of Contemporary Polish. Bloomington, IN: Slavica. ISBN 0-89357-296-9.
[edit] External links
- Examples of Irish prepositional pronouns
- Explanation of Scottish prepositional pronouns
- Prepositions with suffixes in Biblical Hebrew
- Prepositions with pronominal suffixes in Biblical Hebrew