Transitivity

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Transitivity is a category that indicates the number of objects a verb requires or takes in a given instance.

Natural language

In the UNLarium framework, transitivity may assume the following values:

{{#tree:id=nl_TRA|openlevels=0|root=Transitivity (TRA)|

    • intransitive (NTST): no object
    • direct monotransitive (TST): one direct object
    • indirect monotransitive (ITST): one indirect object
    • ditransitive (DTST): one direct object and one indirect object
    • tritransitive (TTST): three objects
    • ambitransitive (ATST): both transitive and intransitive

}}

Example

  • English
    • intransitive (NTST) = fall (John fell)
    • direct monotransitive (TST) = kiss (John kissed Jane)
    • indirect monotransitive (ITST) = depend (John depend on Jane)
    • ditransitive (DTST) = give (John gave Jane an apple)
    • tritransitive (TTST) = trade (John traded Jane an apple for an orange)
    • ambitransitive (ATST) = eat (John ate or John ate an apple)

UNL

In UNL, transitivity, as a syntactic property, is not to be informed.