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Agglutination is used very heavily in some Native American languages, such as Inuktitut, where one word can contain enough morphemes to convey the meaning of what would be a complex sentence in other languages. Agglutination is also a common feature in the native language of the Basque people, the ancient Euskara tongue which has likely been spoken by the Euskaldun (native Basque speakers) for at least 20,000 years. Japanese is also an agglutinating language, adding information such as negation, passive voice, past tense, honorific degree and causality in the verb form. Common examples would be 働かせられたらhatarak·ase·rare·tara "if (s/he) had been made to work..." and 食べたくなかったtabe·ta·ku·na·katta "(I) did not want to eat".
Turkish is yet another agglutinating language: the expression Avustralya·lı·laş·tır·a·ma·dık·lar·ı.mız·dan is pronounced as one word in Turkish, but it can be translated into English as "one of those whom we could not make Australian." Extremes of agglutinationIt is possible to construct artificial extreme examples of agglutination, which have no real use, but illustrate the theoretical capability of the grammar to agglutinate. This is not a question of "long words", since some languages permit limitless combinations with compound words, negative clitics or such, which can be (and are) expressed with an analytic structure in actual usage. The English language, missing inflectional agglutination, can use only derivational Latin agglutination, as in e.g. anti·dis·establish·ment·arian·ism. Agglutinative languages often have more complex derivational agglutination than isolating languages, so they can do the same to a much larger extent. For example, in Hungarian, a word such as el·nem·zet·i·etlen·ít·het·et·len·ség·nek, which means "for [the purposes of] undenationalizationability" can find actual use. Using inflectional agglutination, these can be extended. For example, the official Guinness world record is Finnish epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkäänköhän "Wonder if he can also ... with his capability of not causing things to be unsystematic". It has the derived word epä·järje·st·el·mä·llis·tyttä·mä·ttö·m·yys as the root and is lengthened with the inflectional endings -llä·nsä·kään·kö·hän. However, this word is grammatically unusual, since -kään "also" is used only in negative clauses, but -kö (question) only in question clauses. (The longest Hungarian word: Megszentségteleníthetetlenségeskedéseitekért) See alsopl:Aglutynacyjność pt:Aglutinação sv:Agglutination
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