Behavior
Prototypically, applicatives apply to intransitive verbs. Dixon, R.M.W. & Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald (eds) (1999). ''The Amazonian Languages''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. They can also be called "advancements" or "object promotion" because they bring a peripheral object to the centre as a direct object. This object is sometimes called the ''applied'' object. ForMultiple applicatives
A language may have multiple applicatives, each corresponding to different roles. These roles includeSimilar processes
Applicatives have a degree of overlap with causatives, and in some languages, the two are realized identically. A similar construction known as dative shift, though different from true applicatives, occurs in other languages. Also, the benefactive case is commonly expressed by means of an applicative.Examples
Ainu
In the Ainu language, valency of verbs can be modulated through multiple mechanisms. The language employs three applicative prefixes: ''ko-'', ''e-'' , and ''o-'', each of which serves to increase the valency of a verb. For instance, an intransitive verb with only one argument slot can be modified by an applicative prefix to become a transitive verb, thus requiring two argument slots to be syntactically well-formed. Consider the following example, where the intransitive verb ''itak'' (“to speak”) initially has one argument slot that is fulfilled by the subject pronoun prefix ''ku='' (“I”). By applying the dative applicative prefix ''ko-'' (“to”), the verb transforms into ''koytak'' (“to speak with”), a transitive verb. Now, it requires both a subject, indicated by the prefix ''ku='', and an object, which takes a zero morpheme to denote the third person, referring to the noun ''hekaci'':English
English does not have a dedicated applicative prefix or suffix. However, prepositions can be compounded with verbs for an applicative effect. For example, from *''Jack ran faster than the giant'', the intransitive verb ''ran'' can be made transitive, and the oblique noun ''giant'' the object: *''Jack outran the giant.'' The applicative verb can be made passive, something which is not possible with ''ran'': *''The giant was outrun by Jack.''German
The German prefix ''be-'' is considered an applicative by some, but other analyses reject this view.Swahili
Swahili has an applicative suffix ''-i'' or ''-e'' which appears before the last vowel of the verb. From ''andika'' 'to write', we get transitive and ditransitive Similarly, from ''soma'' 'to read', *''Alinisomea barua'' 'he read me a letter', 'he read a letter to me'. These are sometimes called 'prepositional' forms of the verb because they are translated into English using prepositions: ''cry for, pray for, eat with, enjoy (be happy about), arrive at, sing to, sell to, send to, open (the door) for, reckon with, see for (himself), die at.'' However, this name is inaccurate for Swahili, which doesn't use prepositions for such purposes.Swedish
The Swedish prefix ''be-'' has been analyzed as an applicative by Claire Gronemeyer.Gronemeyer, Claire. (1995). Swedish applied verbs derived by the prefix ''be''-Yagua
Yagua is one language that has dedicated morphology for applicative uses. Here, the applicative suffix ''-ta'' shows that the locative or instrumental oblique is now a direct object: This same ''-ta'' suffix can be used with transitive verbs to create ditransitives: These behave identically as other lexical ditransitives, such as ''give'' and ''send'' in this language.Notes
References
* *Campbell, Lyle & Verónica Grondona (Eds.). (2012). ''The Indigenous Languages of South America: A Comprehensive Guide''. Berlin, Germany: Walter de Gruyter. *Jacques, Guillaume (2013). Applicative and Tropative Derivations in Japhug Rgyalrong. ''Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 36''(2). * *Michaelis, Laura A.; Josef Ruppenhofer. (2000). Valence creation and the German applicative: The inherent semantics of linking patterns. ''Journal of Semantics, 17''(4), 335-395. * *Pacchiarotti, Sara. (2017). ''Bantu Applicative Construction Types involving *-id: Form, Functions and Diachrony'' (Doctoral dissertation). University of Oregon. *{{cite book , first = David A. , last = Peterson , year = 2007 , title = Applicative constructions , publisher = Oxford University Press , isbn = *Polinsky, Maria. 2005. Applicative constructions. In Martin Haspelmath, Matthew S Dryer, David Gil & Bernard Comrie (eds.), The world atlas of language structures, 442–445. Oxford University Press. (http://wals.info/chapter/109). *Valenzuela, Pilar M. (2010). Applicative constructions in Shipibo-Konibo (Panoan). ''International Journal of American Linguistics, 76''(1), 101-144. Grammatical voices Transitivity and valency Grammatical construction types