Tripartite language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linguistic typology
Morphological
Analytic
Synthetic
Fusional
Agglutinative
Polysynthetic
Oligosynthetic
Morphosyntactic
Alignment
Accusative
Ergative
Philippine
Active-stative
Tripartite
Inverse marking
Syntactic pivot
Theta role
Word Order
VO languages
Agent Verb Object
Verb Agent Object
Verb Object Agent
OV languages
Agent Object Verb
Object Agent Verb
Object Verb Agent
Time Manner Place
Place Manner Time
This box: view  talk  edit

A tripartite language, also called an ergative-accusative language, is one that marks the agent, experiencer, and patient verb arguments each in different ways. If the language has morphological case, the arguments are marked in this way:

In simpler terms, it distinguishes between the subject of an intransitive verb, the subject of a transitive verb and the object (of a transitive verb).

Languages lacking case inflections may indicate case with a fixed word order.

Tripartite languages are rare. Some examples are Indo-Aryan, Wangkumara, Nez Percé and Kalaw Lagaw Ya. Several constructed languages, especially engineered languages, use a tripartite case system or tripartite adposition system.