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Universal 1102:

Posted in Universals Archive

Universal 1102:

Original
Yet all human languages classify actions into two basic types: those involving one obligatory participant, which are described by intransitive clauses, and those involving two or more obligatory participants, which are dealt with by transitive clauses.
Standardized
All human languages classify actions into two basic types: those involving one obligatory participant, which are described by intransitive clauses, and those involving two or more obligatory participants, which are dealt with by transitive clauses.
Keywords
intransitive clause, transitive, participant
Domain
syntax
Type
unconditional
Status
achronic
Quality
absolute
Basis
languages surveyed in Dixon 1995
Source
Dixon 1995: 113-114
Counterexamples

One Comment

  1. FP
    FP

    A. Harris 1997: 372 comments: “If it is meant only roughly, generally, it is obvious and unremarkable; if it is meant literally and intended to apply to every verb in every language, there are exceptions. For example, Georgian has a small group of intransitives that require a second participant, such as elis ‘s/he waits for him/her’, seessabaameba ‘something corresponds something’, esat’q’viseba ‘something agrees with something, suits something’… Lezgi, in a different family, has similar patterns (for details see Haspelmath 1993: 271-2).”

    1. May 2020

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