Syntax 1 Wiki: Week 4
Valence Properties of Verbs
All verbs in English need to have a subject. But verbs differ from each in other in whether they need to have complements, how many complements they need, and what kinds of complements they are. All the elements which a verb (or a word of another part of speech) can occur with are called its arguments. Technically speaking, all our verbs have a feature ARG-ST (= argument structure), which is a list of all the verb's arguments.
Traditional Grammar already distinguishes between intransitive verbs like snore and transitive verbs like kiss. An intransitive verb like snore thus has an ARG-ST list with just the subject on it, i.e. a list of length 1, whereas a transitive verb has a list containing its subject and its direct object, i.e. a list of length 2.
Convince yourself that this is true by looking at these two verbs in one of our online grammars. Note that the ARG-ST list appears all the way at the bottom:
Homework for Week 5
1. Work through the following sections of the Wiki:
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