'Case government' is a
linguistical term for the effect of a verb on the surrounding
grammatical cases and their effects on the meaning. It is a form of
agreement, but it is not only for reduncancy, rather it can create semantical contrasts. It is typically highly arbitrary and specific to a given verb.
Case government is found
German (''Rektion'') and
Finnish, for example. In Finnish, a
telicity contrast is expressed. In German, the object of a verb is in the
accusative case, but there are several verbs that arbitrarily require a different case or a preposition for the object.
Case government is absent in English, because English doesn't rely on grammatical cases, but several postpositions create similar contrasts: e.g. ''blow'' vs. ''blow up''.
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