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Urdu postpositions are much different from English prepositions, not only semantically but also morphologically and syntactically. Morphologically they appear as clitics, as bound morphemes, and as phonetically null entities. As clitics, they perform dual function: case markers and postpositions. Syntactically, they behave in three different ways: (1) as overt postpositions, (2) in the form of OAF, (3) by staying completely unactualized. This paper describes their silent behaviour.
Case Postposition, Nominative Accusative, Dative Locative, Genitive Instrumental, OAP, OAF
Case Postposition, Nominative Accusative, Dative Locative, Genitive Instrumental, OAP, OAF
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