Everything about Compound Verb totally explained
In
linguistics, a
compound verb or
complex predicate is a multi-
word compound that acts as a single
verb. One component of the compound is a
light verb or
vector, which carries any
inflections, indicating
tense,
mood, or
aspect, but provides only fine shades of meaning. The other, "primary", component is a verb or noun which carries most of the
semantics of the compound, and determines its
arguments. It is usually in either
base or
conjunctive participial form.
A compound verb is also called a "complex
predicate" because the semantics, as formally modeled by a predicate, is determined by the primary verb, though both verbs appear in the surface form. Whether Noun+Verb (N+V) compounds are considered to be "compound verbs" is a matter of naming convention. Generally, the term
complex predicate usually includes N+V compounds, whereas the term
compound verb is usually reserved for V+V compounds. However, several authors also refer to N+V compounds as compound verbs.
Compound verbs are to be
distinguished from serial verbs which typically signify a sequence of actions, and in which the verbs are relatively equal in semantic and grammatical weight.
Structure
Thus, there are two classes of complex predicates:
- V+V compounds: The true compound verb, where the first verb is a Light verb (LV), followed by a primary or Heavy verb. With a few exceptions all compound verbs alternate with their simple counterparts. That is, removing the light verb / vector doesn't affect grammaticality at all nor the meaning very much: निकला nikalā '(He) went out.' In a few languages both components of the compound verb can be finite forms: Kurukh kecc-ar ker-ar lit. "died-3pl went-3pl" '(They) died.'
- N+V compounds: A compound with Noun+verb, converting the noun into a verbal structure; the arguments and the semantics are determined by the N and the tense markers / inflections are carried by the V. This would include English stretched verb examples like take a walk or commit suicide. Often the Verbs participating N+V compounding are also those that participate as LVs in V+V compounds. The N+V compound appears in almost all languages, especially with LVs such as "do", "make" etc., and are sometimes not considered to be a true compound verb.
Languages with compound verbs
Compound verbs are very common in all the languages of India, though they're more frequent in the northern
Indo-Aryan languages than in
Dravidian languages. In addition to
Hindi-Urdu and
Panjabi, they occur in other Indo-Iranian languages like
Persian,
Marathi and
Nepali, in
Tibeto-Burman languages like
Limbu and
Newari. Also, they're very frequent in
Altaic languages like
Korean,
Japanese, and in Central Asian Indo-European languages
Kazakh,
Uzbek, and
Kyrgyz, and in northeast Caucasian languages like
Tsez and
Avar.
English
Conventionally, the English language expresses fine distinctions as to the beginning, duration, completion, or repetition, of an action in the form of compound verbs, using
auxiliaries or other
lexical mechanisms. Examples here include
was starting,
had lived,
had been seen, etc. This usage reduced the need to create complex predicates.
Though V+V compound verbs are rare in
English, one may illustrate the form with the example "start reading". In some interpretations, one may consider "start" as a
light verb, which carries markers like tense. However, the main part of the meaning, as well as the arguments of "started reading", for example answers to questions such as
who? (agent), or
what was it that he "started reading" (object) are determined by the second, primary verb, "read". Note that "start" also modifies the meaning or the
semantics, by focusing on the early part of the "reading". Also note that "start" carries plural/tense markers (
they start|he starts reading), whereas "reading" appears in this fixed form, and doesn't change with tense, number, gender etc.
Whether
gerundive forms like "start reading" are compound verbs or not is controversial in English; many linguists prefer to treat "reading" treated as a nominal in its
gerundive form. However, the compound verb treatment may have some advantages, particularly when it comes to semantic analysis. For example, in
X starts reading Y, the question what did X start is less revealing than what did x "start reading".
English has many examples of N+V compound predicates: see
stretched verb.
Sometimes examples from English cited for compound verbs turn out to be
serial verbs, for example:
What did you go and do that for?; or
your business might just up and leave.
Hindi
Compound verbs are very common in
Indo-Iranian languages, such as
Hindi-Urdu and
Panjabi, where as many as 20% of the verb forms in running text may be compounds.
For example,
Hindi निकल गया
nikal gayā, lit. "exit went", means 'went out', while निकल पड़ा
nikal paRā, lit. "exit fell", means 'departed' or 'was blurted out'. In these examples निकल
nikal is the primary verb, and गया
gayā and पड़ा
paRā are the light verbs.
Japanese
Similarly, in both English
start reading and Japanese 読み始める
yomihajimeru "start-
CONJUNCTIVE-read" "start reading," the vector verbs
start and 始める
hajimeru "start" change according to tense, negation, and the like, while the main verbs
reading and 読み
yomi "reading" usually remain the same. An exception to this is the passive voice, in which both English and Japanese modify the main verb, for example
start to be read and 読まれ始める
yomarehajimeru lit. "read-
PASSIVE-(CONJUNCTIVE)-start"
start to be read.
Quichua-influenced Spanish
Under the influence of a
Quichua substrate speakers living in the Ecuadorian
altiplano have innovated compound verbs in Spanish:
» De rabia puso rompiendo la olla, 'In anger (he/she) smashed the pot.' (Lit. from anger
put breaking the pot)
Botaremos matándote 'We will kill you.' (Cf. Quichua
huañuchi-shpa shitashun, lit. kill-
CP throw.1plFut, तेरे को मार डालेंगे )
Historical Processes and Grammaticalization
As languages change, the vector or light verb may retain its original meaning to different degrees of
bleaching, part of the process of
grammaticalization.
Thus, in the Hindi compound nikal paRā (exit+fall), paRā has almost none of its "fall" meaning, though some of the finality of the fall also is transferred as a
perfective aspect. On the other hand, the Japanese "meru" (start) retains a good deal of its independent word meaning even in the compound.
In the long run, it has been suggested that LVs that are particularly frequent, may become grammaticalized, so that they may now occur systematically with other verbal constituents, so that they become
an
auxiliary verb (for example the English verb "be", as in "I am eating", or "had" in "they had finished"), or, after sound change, even a
clitic (a shortened verb, as in "I'm"). In particular, some verb inflections (for example
Latin future tense inflections) are thought to have arisen in this manner.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Compound Verb'.
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