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Universal 1648:
Original
The great majority of pronominalization strategies, regardless of language type, favour dependent-marking pattern.
Standardized
IF relative clause formation involves pronominalization, THEN it will be of dependent-marking type.
Keywords
head-marking, dependent-marking, relative clause, pronoun
Domain
inflection, syntax
Type
implication
Status
achronic
Quality
statistical
Basis
Abkhaz, Adyghe (both NW Caucasian), Arabic (Semitic), Bantu family, Basque, Burushaski (both isolate), Chechen (N. Caucasian), Dyirbal (Pama-Nyungan), Hopi (Uto-Aztecan), Hurrian (isolate), Japanese (Japanese-Ryukyuan), Kaititj (Arandic), Lakhota (Siouan), Mayan family, Navajo (Athabaskan), NE Caucasian, Quechuan family, Tewa (Tanoan), Tonkawa (Coahuiltecan), Tungusic family, Turkic family, Uralic (eastern & western), Uto-Aztecan, Washo (Hokan), Yuman family
Source
Nichols 1984 : 533
Counterexamples
Tanoan family uses head-marked relativization by pronominalization. A number of older Indo-European languages exhibit occasional instances of head-marking pronominalization (Nichols 1984: 533).