(By Jakob Lesage): "Are phonologically independent personal pronouns morphologically marked for oblique case (i.e. not S, A or P)? Morphological case involves any type of case marking (or flagging) that is phonologically bound (affixes, clitics, tone, alternation, vowel lengthening, etc.). Suppletion also counts as case marking for this feature. Oblique NPs are NPs having a function other than S, A or P, e.g. dative, locative, ablative, instrumental, comitative, location in time, etc. Note that genitive or possessive are not seen as cases for this feature."