Feature: Are there internally-headed relative clauses?

Feature URL:
https://grambank.clld.org/parameters/GB329
Description

(By Jakob Lesage): "Can a relativized noun be morphosyntactically part of the relative clause? This could mean different things in different languages. In some languages, the relativized noun may literally be inside the relative clause, in terms of placement, for example [A green hat [the woman] has] is tall to mean ‘The woman who has a green hat is tall’. In other languages, the noun may receive case marking for its function inside the relative clause rather than its function inside the main clause, for example the man-SBJ greeted [[the woman-SBJ] who has a green hat] as opposed to the man-SBJ greeted [[the woman-OBJ] who has a green hat]. Do not consider correlative relative clauses here (see GB330). It must be possible for the head noun to be any noun, not only an unspecific (pro)noun (e.g. whoever)."