Universal 94: Object word (noun) > Property word (adjective) > Action word (verb)
- Original
- The (non)use of a copula conforms to a hierarchy of predication:
Action word (verb) < Property word (adjective) < Object word (noun). For instance if copula form is required for any member of the hierarchy in a specific language, then it is required for any member to the right of the hierarchy.
- Standardized
- IF an overt copula is required for a predicate that is an action word (verb), THEN it is required for a predicate that is a property word (adjective).
IF an overt copula is required for a predicate that is a property word (adjective), THEN it is required for a predicate that is an object word (noun). - Keywords
- copula, verb, adjective, noun, predication
- Domain
- syntax
- Type
- implicational hierarchy
- Status
- achronic
- Quality
- absolute
- Basis
- languages mentioned in Croft 1991
- Source
- Croft 1991: 130, Croft 1995a: 506
- Counterexamples
- Mangarayi (Gunwingguan, Australian) violates this predication hierarchy (Newmeyer 1998a: 175, p.c. W. Croft)
The same hierarchy is found for verbalization strategies for intransitive main predicates (Stassen 1992), here #911.