Housing Watch Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Patient (grammar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_(grammar)

    By that definition, stative verbs act on themes, and dynamic verbs act on patients. Theory. Typically, the situation is denoted by a sentence, the action by a verb in the sentence, and the patient by a noun phrase. For example, in the sentence "Jack ate the cheese", the cheese is the patient.

  3. Agent (grammar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_(grammar)

    The use of some transitive verbs denoting strictly reciprocal events may involve a conflation of agent and subject. In the sentence "John met Sylvia", for example, though both John and Sylvia would equally meet Dowty's definition of a Proto-Agent, the co-agent Sylvia is downgraded to patient because it is the direct object of the sentence.

  4. Patient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient

    A day patient (or day-patient) is a patient who is using the full range of services of a hospital or clinic but is not expected to stay the night. The term was originally used by psychiatric hospital services using of this patient type to care for people needing support to make the transition from in-patient to out-patient care. However, the ...

  5. Passive voice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_voice

    A passive voice construction is a grammatical voice construction that is found in many languages. [ 1] In a clause with passive voice, the grammatical subject expresses the theme or patient of the main verb – that is, the person or thing that undergoes the action or has its state changed. [ 2] This contrasts with active voice, in which the ...

  6. Thematic relation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thematic_relation

    In certain theories of linguistics, thematic relations, also known as semantic roles, are the various roles that a noun phrase may play with respect to the action or state described by a governing verb, commonly the sentence's main verb. For example, in the sentence "Susan ate an apple", Susan is the doer of the eating, so she is an agent; [ 1 ...

  7. Morphosyntactic alignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphosyntactic_alignment

    Linguistic typology. In linguistics, morphosyntactic alignment is the grammatical relationship between arguments —specifically, between the two arguments (in English, subject and object) of transitive verbs like the dog chased the cat, and the single argument of intransitive verbs like the cat ran away. English has a subject, which merges the ...

  8. Reflexive verb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflexive_verb

    Reflexive verb. In grammar, a reflexive verb is, loosely, a verb whose direct object is the same as its subject, for example, "I wash myself". More generally, a reflexive verb has the same semantic agent and patient (typically represented syntactically by the subject and the direct object). For example, the English verb to perjure is reflexive ...

  9. Agent noun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_noun

    For example, driver is an agent noun formed from the verb drive. [ 2 ] Usually, derived in the above definition has the strict sense attached to it in morphology , that is the derivation takes as an input a lexeme (an abstract unit of morphological analysis) and produces a new lexeme.