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Valency (linguistics)In linguistics Valency or valence refers to the capacity of a verb to take a specific number and type of arguments (noun phrase positions). A monovalent verb (e.g., "sleep") cannot take a direct object ("He sleeps," versus "He sleeps it."). A trivalent verb has three arguments (e.g., "give" has the giver, the givee, and the thing given).
In this sentence: Newlyn lies at the western end of Mount's Bay. the verb lies implies the occurrence of a subject and an adverbial (valency = 2). Compare to the sentence Newlyn lies which has a very different meaning On the other hand in By the turn of the century Newlyn had changed the verb changed only requires a subject (valancy = 1) as in the sentence Newlyn had changed The linguistical meaning of valence is derived from the definition of valency in chemistry external linksThe contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
How to see transparent copy 01-04-2007 01:21:04 |
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