Ergative verb
In the English language, an ergative verb is a verb whose action affects the subject, rather than the object, of the verb. Another way to describe this is that a normal verb's patient is its object, whereas an ergative verb's patient is its subject. Often, but not always, ergative verbs take no direct object. Some verbs can act as either a regular transitive verb or an ergative verb.
Examples of ergative-only verbs:
- I think.
- I see.
- I understand.
- I experience.
Examples of verbs that can be ergative or transitive:
- open
- The door opens.
- John opens the door.
- melt
- The ice melts.
- I melt some ice.
See also
- intransitive verb
- transitive verb
- ditransitive verb
- compare to ergative case, nominative case, reflexive verb
Categories: Grammar