Dog Breeds Information and More
  Ergative case - Dog Breeds Facts and Information Dog Breeds Selector A to Z dog breeds Forums

 
Dog names
Dog training
Toy dogs
Intelligence
Dog health
Dog worship
Ticks

 
Golden Retriever
Labrador Retriever
Jack Russell
 
Find a Breed
 
Dog Breeds Encyclopedia
 

Ergative case


In ergative-absolutive languages, the ergative case identifies the subject of a transitive verb. In such languages, the ergative case is typically marked (most salient), while the absolutive case is unmarked. New work in case theory has vigorously supported the idea that the ergative case identifies the agent (intentful doer of action) of a verb (Woolford 2004). Furthermore, the agent has been shown to have a fixed location in which it is base-generated in the specifier of a light-verb projection within X-bar theory.

Certain Australian Aboriginal languages possess an intransitive case and an accusative case along with an ergative case, and lack an absolutive case.

See also

Sources:

Woolford, Ellen. ‘Lexical Case, Inherent Case, and Argument Structure.’ Aug. 2004
Online: http://people.umass.edu/ellenw/

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the
GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy