A language is
dependent-marking if grammatical markers of
agreement and
case government between the words of
phrases tend to appear more on dependents than on
heads. The distinction between
head-marking and dependent-marking was first explored by Johanna Nichols in 1986, and has since become a central criterion in language typology, whereby languages are classified according to whether they are more head-marking or dependent-marking. Many languages employ both head and dependent-marking, some employ
double-marking, and yet others employ
zero-marking. However, it is not clear that the head of a clause has anything to do with the head of a noun phrase, or even what the head of a clause is.