![]() ![]() And yet despite the declensional system, ઓ ( o) often gets tacked onto nominative marked masculine and neuter plurals anyway. Unlike the English plural it is not mandatory, and may be left unexpressed if plurality is already expressed in some other way: by explicit numbering, agreement, or the above declensional system (as is the case with nominative marked masculines and neuters). Second, there is no distinction of gender.įurthermore, there also exists in Gujarati a plural marker - ઓ ( o). Rather, for marked feminine and unmarked nouns the locative is a postposition, which are explained on later in the article. First, it only exists as a case for masculines and neuters, which is why the corresponding feminine cell has been left blanked out. Two things must be noted about the locative case and its limited nature. These are the paradigms for the termination. Nouns may be divided into declensional subtypes: marked nouns displaying characteristic, declensional vowel terminations, and unmarked nouns which do not. Gujarati has three genders, two numbers, and three cases ( nominative, oblique/ vocative, and to a certain extent, locative). ![]()
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