Transitivity (grammatical category)

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In linguistics, transitivity is a property of verbs that relates to whether a verb can take direct objects. It is closely related to valency.

Traditional grammar makes a binary distinction between transitive verbs such as throw, injure, kiss that take a direct object, versus intransitive verbs such as fall or sit that cannot take a direct object. In practice, many languages, such as English intepret the category more flexibly; allowing, for example, ambitransitive verbs or ditransitive verbs.

In functional grammar, transitivity is considered to be a continuum rather than a binary category.

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[edit] Formal analysis

Many languages, such as Hungarian, mark transitivity through morphology; transitive verbs and intransitive verbs behave in distinctive ways. In languages with polypersonal agreement, an intransitive verb will agree with its subject only, while a transitive verb will agree with both subject and direct object.

In other languages the distinction is based on syntax. It is possible to identify an intransitive verb in English, for example, by attempting to supply it with an appropriate direct object:

  • You kissed my hand - transitive verb.
  • She injured him - transitive verb.
  • What did you throw? - transitive verb.

By contrast, an intransitive verb coupled with a direct object will result in an ungrammatical utterance:

  • *What did you fall?
  • *I sat a chair.

Conversely (at least in a traditional analysis), using a transitive verb in English without a direct object will result in an incomplete sentence:

  • I kissed (. . .)
  • You injured (. . .)
  • Where is she now? *She's injuring.

English is unusually lax by Indo-European standards in its rules on transitivity; what may appear to be a transitive verb can be used as an intransitive verb, and vice versa. Eat and read and many other verbs can be used either transitively or intransitively. Often there is a semantic difference between the intransitive and transitive forms of a verb: the water is boiling versus I boiled the water; the grapes grew versus I grew the grapes. In these examples, the role of the subject differs between intransitive and transitive verbs.

Even though an intransitive verb may not take a direct object, it often may take an appropriate indirect object -

  • I laughed at him.

What are considered to be intransitive verbs can also take cognate objects -where the object is considered integral to the action, for example I slept an hour.

[edit] Languages that express transitivity through morphology

The following languages of the below language families (or hypothetical language families) have this feature:[1]

In the Uralic language family:

In the Paleosiberian hypothetical language family:

[edit] Functional analysis

Transitivity expresses a number of associated meanings across languages. Across languages, a prototypically transitive verb involves:

  • A change of state in the object - for example, smash, open, throw.
  • Agency and volition by the subject - where these are frequently absent in intransitive verbs, such as I sank or it broke.
  • intensity of effect or change in the object - compare I shot at the deer (intransitive) versus I shot the deer (transitive).

Languages also differ in how the transitivity of a grammatical form affects its meaning.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Pusztay 1990: 86–92

[edit] See also

[edit] External links