Transitivity (grammar)
Transitivity is a linguistics property that relates to whether a verb, participle, or gerund denotes a transitive object. It is closely related to valency, which considers other arguments in addition to transitive objects.
English grammar makes a binary distinction between intransitive verbs and transitive verbs. Many languages, including English, have ditransitive verbs that denote two objects, and some verbs may be ambitransitive in a manner that is either transitive or intransitive depending on the given context.
History
The notion of transitivity, as well as other notions that today are the basics of linguistics, was first introduced by the Stoics and the Peripatetic school, but they probably referred to the whole sentence containing transitive or intransitive verbs, not just to the verb. The discovery of the Stoics was later used and developed by the philologists of the Alexandrian school and later grammarians.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:
- She changed her clothing — transitive verb
- His changed attitude — transitive participle
- The wind began changing directions — transitive gerund
- What did you arrive?
- I belong the team.
- I announced
- You brought
- Did she complete the task? Yes, she completed
Even though an intransitive verb may not take a direct object, it often may take an appropriate indirect object:
- I laughed
Languages that express transitivity through morphology
The following languages of the below language families are examples of languages that have this feature:In the Sino-Tibetan languages language family:
In the Uralo-Altaic hypothetical language family:
- Mordvinic languages
- The three Ugric languages
- Northern Samoyedic languages
- Turkic languages
- Mongolic languages
- Korean
- Japanese
In the Paleosiberian hypothetical language family:
- Languages of both branches of the Eskimo–Aleut family; for details from the Eskimo branch, see e.g. Sireniki, Kalaallisut
- Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages
- Yukaghir
- The Ket language has a very sophisticated verbal inclination system, referring to the object in many ways.
- Tok Pisin, for example has laik meaning 'want', while laikim means 'like '
- Bislama
- Solomon Islands Pidgin
- Torres Strait Creole
Form–function mappings
Formal transitivity is associated with a variety of semantic functions across languages. Crosslinguistically, Hopper and Thompson have proposed to decompose the notion of transitivity into ten formal and semantic features ; the features argued to be associated with the degree of transitivity are summarized in the following well-known table:| High | Low | |
| A. Participants | 2 or more participants, A and O. | 1 participant |
| B. Kinesis | action | non-action |
| C. Aspect | telic | atelic |
| D. Punctuality | punctual | non-punctual |
| E. Volitionality | volitional | non-volitional |
| F. Affirmation | affirmative | negative |
| G. Mode | realis | irrealis |
| H. Agency | A high in potency | A low in potency |
| I. Affectedness of O | O totally affected | O not affected |
| J. Individuation of O | O highly individuated | O non-individuated |
Næss has argued at length for the following two points:
- Though formally a broad category of phenomena, transitivity boils down to a way to maximally distinguish the two participants involved ;
- Major participants are describable in terms of the semantic features which makes them distinctive from each other. Different combinations of these binary values will yield different types of participants, which are then compatible or incompatible with different verbs. Individual languages may, of course, make more fine-grained distinctions.
- Volitional Undergoers :,,
- Force:,,
- Instrument:,,