Entertainment / Literature / Incorporative: In most languages, different grammatical components reflect different parts of speech. For instance, verbs and direct objects are distinct words in most languages, and thus they require two separate grammatical components. However, in an incorporative language, these common sentence elements are combined into a single word. For instance, the incorporative languages may lack independently functioning verbs and independently functioning direct objects, but use a single type of word that fulfill both functions simultaneously. (Instead of saying 'I kicked rocks,' with three words, the incorporative language might use a single verb/object 'kickrocks' and accordingly must use a completely different verb/object to reflect other kicking situations.) In now outdated linguistic classification, incorporative languages were thought to be more 'advanced' than isolating or agglutinative languages but less 'advanced' than inflected languages like Latin (Algeo 58). The Eskimo tongue commonly known as West Greenlandic is an example of an incorporative language.
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