The Dependent-marking language reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Dependent-marking language

For people who check facts
A dependent-marking language is one where the grammatical marks showing relations between different constituents of a phrase tend to be placed on the dependents or modifiers, rather than the heads or nuclei, of the phrase in question. In a noun phrase, the head is the main noun and the dependents are the article, the adjectives, the possessives, etc. In a verb phrase the head is the verb and the dependents are its argumentss (subject, object, etc.).

A typical example of almost pure dependent marking is Japanese, where each part of a sentence is supposed to be marked for its function (topic, subject, object, complement), while the verb is completely devoid of morphological marks showing person, number, gender or any other property of the arguments.

"Gaka ga e o kaita."
gaka   ga      e        o      kaita
artist SUBJECT painting OBJECT draw-PAST
"The artist drew a painting."

See also: head-marking language