ExtRel: The head appears outside the relative clause. This is called an external relative clause.
		Sasa-loc	kill-ptc.pst	duck-3sg	house-loc	be.prs.3sg
		‘The duck, which Sasa killed, is in the house.’ (S. D.)
(2) saša χoťi wās-e al-ǝs-te kol-t ōli.
		Sasa	what	duck-3sg	kill-pst-obj.sg.3sg	house-loc	be.prs.3sg
		‘The duck, which Sasa killed, is in the house.’ (S. D.)
In Northern Mansi, the primary form of subordination is the participle construction, in which case the head noun is outside the subordinate clause (1). Alternatively, relative pronouns can also mark subordination (Rombandeeva 1979) – nonetheless the head noun is still outside the subordinate clause (2).
