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- Q16179959 subject Q8329278.
- Q16179959 subject Q8329330.
- Q16179959 subject Q8797476.
- Q16179959 abstract "Burmese pronouns (Burmese: နာမ်စား) are words in the Burmese language used to address or refer to people or things.Subject pronouns begin sentences, though the subject is generally omitted in the imperative forms and in conversation. Grammatically speaking, subject marker particles (က ([ɡa̰] in colloquial, သည် [θì] in formal) must be attached to the subject pronoun, although they are also generally omitted in conversation. Object pronouns must have an object marker particle (ကို [ɡò] in colloquial, အား [á] in formal) attached immediately after the pronoun. Proper nouns are often substituted for pronouns. One's status in relation to the audience determines the pronouns used, with certain pronouns used for different audiences.".
- Q16179959 wikiPageExternalLink bradley1993pronouns.pdf.
- Q16179959 wikiPageExternalLink bradley1995reflexives.pdf.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q17006574.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q175026.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q36224.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q8329278.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q8329330.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q854997.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q8797476.
- Q16179959 wikiPageWikiLink Q9228.
- Q16179959 comment "Burmese pronouns (Burmese: နာမ်စား) are words in the Burmese language used to address or refer to people or things.Subject pronouns begin sentences, though the subject is generally omitted in the imperative forms and in conversation. Grammatically speaking, subject marker particles (က ([ɡa̰] in colloquial, သည် [θì] in formal) must be attached to the subject pronoun, although they are also generally omitted in conversation.".
- Q16179959 label "Burmese pronouns".