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This page pertains to UD version 2.

VerbType: verb type

Values: Aux Cop Mod Light Quasi

We already split auxiliary and non-auxiliary verbs at the level of UPOS tags. The VerbType feature may be used to capture finer distinctions that some tagsets make.

Aux: auxiliary verb

Verb used to create periphrastic verb forms (tenses, passives etc.) In many languages there will be ambiguity between auxiliary and other usages, thus the same verb should get different feature values depending on context.

Examples

Cop: copula verb

Verb used to make nominal predicates from adjectives, nouns or participles. Some languages omit the copula or use other means to create nominal predicates. In languages that have copula, it is often the equivalent of the verb “to be”.

Examples

Mod: modal verb

A group of verbs traditionally distinguished in grammars of some languages. They take infinitive of another verb as argument (with or without infinitive-marking conjunction, in languages that have it) and add various modes of possibility, necessity etc. to the meaning of the infinitive. There are other verbs that take infinitives as arguments but they are not considered modal (e.g. phasal verbs such as “to begin to do something”). The set of modal verbs for a language is closed and can be enumerated. Depending on language-internal considerations, modal verbs may be considered a subset of auxiliaries (AUX) or non-auxiliary verbs (VERB).

Note that some languages (e.g. Turkish) use special forms of the main verb instead of combining it with a modal verb.

Examples

Light: light (support) verb

Light or support verb is used in verbo-nominal constructions where the main part of the meaning is contributed by a noun complement but it is not just a nominal predicate with a copula. An English example would be to take a nap, where take is the light verb. It is often the case that the light verb can also function as a normal verb in the language (cf. to take two dollars). If the light verb constructions are used frequently in a language (e.g. Hindi or Japanese) or if there is a dedicated light verb that cannot be used as normal verb, it makes sense to mark light verbs with a dedicated feature value.

Examples

Quasi: quasi-verb

A word that functions partially as a verb and is tagged VERB, yet it is defective in some other aspect that are typical of verbs in the given language. For example, quasi-verbs in Polish function as predicates and take infinitives of regular verbs as complements, yet their morphology is not verbal: they are more like frozen forms of adjectives.

Examples


VerbType in other languages: [af] [apu] [bej] [gu] [ka] [pcm] [u]