Alamblak is a
polysynthetic language. It is highly
agglutinative with some
fusional elements. It exhibits several linguistic features that generally indicate polysynthesis in a Papuan-language context. Some of these include
polypersonalism (marking of multiple arguments on verbs) and heavy
head-marking. Its basic
word order is
subject–object–verb, and several other morphosyntactic features generally associated with SOV languages are also exhibited in Alamblak. Specifically,
subordinate clauses precede independent clauses (e.g.,
relative clauses precede the head),
case relators follow the noun (as enclitics or suffixes), and the interrogative element is not
fronted in a clause, but remains
in situ. Examples of these
typological features can be seen below. Examples are from Bruce (1984). {{interlinear|indent=3 {{interlinear|indent=3 {{interlinear|indent=3 ==See also==