Previous work has investigated various syntactic and semantic properties of locative PPs, but a lesser-studied set of facts is so-called "locative orientation" – the variable locating of participants in the location described by the locative. In Kinyarwanda (Bantu; Rwanda), the presence/absence of the applicative morpheme -ir corresponds to an alternation in orientation: with the non-applied variant, the locative only necessarily describes the object\u27s location; with the applied variant, all participants must be at the location described by the locative. I argue that Kinyarwanda locatives are neither prepositions (but rather noun class prefixes) nor adjuncts, and therefore cannot be analyzed as intersectional (adjunct) modifiers. On the ...