-
Deverbal nouns are
nouns that are
derived from
verbs or verb phrases.
Verbal nouns and
deverbal nouns are
distinct syntactic word classes. Functionally...
- noun suffixes. The
following have been
classified by
Gerard Clauson as
deverbal suffixes.
Yenisei Inscriptions (8-10th
centuries CE) - a
group of texts...
-
corresponding deverbal noun (Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa: "noun of action"; Vanhove: "action noun"; Roper: "nomen actionis"). For weak verbs, the
deverbal noun...
-
ordinary adjectives, with no verb-like features) may be
distinguished as
deverbal adjectives. An
example of a
verbal adjective with verb-like
features is...
- event.
Deverbal noun
Alexiadou (2001)
adopts a
structural approach to
accounting for
eventative versus non-eventative
interpretations of
deverbal nominalization...
-
called verbal nouns or adjectives, but they are also
called deverbal nouns and
deverbal adjectives, to
distinguish them from the
truly "verbal" forms...
-
grammatical verbal character), the -ing form may be
called a
deverbal noun or
deverbal adjective.
Terminology varies, however; it may also be called...
- criterion. The tree form (11c)
shows the
adjunct DP in its
relative position.
Deverbal nouns are
derived from
verbs and thus ****ign theta-roles as
their verb...
- ruling'. This
formation with the 'origin'
suffix -iya is
derived from a
deverbal abstract noun *xšāy-aθa- 'rule, ruling, Herrschaft', from the (Old Persian)...
-
conversion (as with the noun love from the verb love). The
formation of such
deverbal nouns is not
generally a
productive process, that is, it
cannot be indiscriminately...