YoungSik, Choi. 2015. Korean Dative and Locative Cases: Postposition or Morphological Case Marker. Studies in Modern Grammar 83, 1-24. I propose that the dative and locative case particles are not postpositions but morphological case markers, quite in...
YoungSik, Choi. 2015. Korean Dative and Locative Cases: Postposition or Morphological Case Marker. Studies in Modern Grammar 83, 1-24. I propose that the dative and locative case particles are not postpositions but morphological case markers, quite in contrast to the common view in the literature (Yang 1972, Cho and Sells 1995, and Suh 2013 among many others). I will show the difference between the nominative and the accusative and the dative and the locative in case drop, case stacking, and case spreading is attributed to the fact that the dative case and the locative case are inherent case, as compared with the nominative and the accusative, which are structural case par excellence. The present proposal has a nontrivial implication regarding the other case particles typically argued as postpositions in Korean.