Difference between revisions of "Absolutive (verb form)"
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Linguipedia (talk | contribs) (New page: In Indic linguistics, the term '''absolutive''' is sometimes used as a synonym of converb. === Polysemy === The term ''absolutive'' is also used for a grammatical case (see [[absolut...) |
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===Other languages=== | ===Other languages=== | ||
− | German [[Absolutiv (de)|Absolutiv]] | + | *German [[Absolutiv (de)|Absolutiv]] |
+ | *Russian [[деепричастие]] | ||
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[[Category:Morphology]] | [[Category:Morphology]] | ||
[[Category:Verbal morphology]] | [[Category:Verbal morphology]] |
Latest revision as of 21:16, 6 August 2007
In Indic linguistics, the term absolutive is sometimes used as a synonym of converb.
Polysemy
The term absolutive is also used for a grammatical case (see absolutive case).
Synonyms
- gerund: this term is more widely used, e.g., by Tikkanen (1987).
- conjunctive participle
- converb
See converb for more synonyms.
Origin
Schlegel (1820) first called the Sanskrit converb an "absolute participle", apparently to contrast it with the Latin and Greek participium conjunctum, which agrees with an argument of the main clause in gender, number and case, while the Sanskrit converb does not show any agreement. The term absolutive originated around the middle of the 19th century in anti-Boppian German-speaking circles (see Tikkanen 1987:37 and Haspelmath 1995:46 for discussion; Franz Bopp used the term gerund).
References
- Schlegel, August Wilhelm von. 1820. "Ausgaben indischer Bücher: Nalus." Indische Bibliothek 2: 96-128.
- Tikkanen, Bertil. 1987. The Sanskrit gerund: a synchronic, diachronic and typological analysis. (Studia Orientalia, 62.) Helsinki: Finnish Oriental Society.
Other languages
- German Absolutiv
- Russian деепричастие