Difference between revisions of "Thematic Relation (definition)"

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(I don't believe the distinction between patients and themes is a linguistically significant one, so I'll never use it, so I delete patient.)
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:• [[Agent (definition)|'''Agents''']] do or precipitate the action
 
:• [[Agent (definition)|'''Agents''']] do or precipitate the action
:• [[Patient (definition)|'''Patients''']] (or themes) suffer the effects of the action
 
 
:• [[Experiencer (definition)|'''Experiencers''']] feel or perceive an event
 
:• [[Experiencer (definition)|'''Experiencers''']] feel or perceive an event
 
:• [[Theme (definition)|'''Themes''']] are moved, experienced or perceived
 
:• [[Theme (definition)|'''Themes''']] are moved, experienced or perceived

Revision as of 08:14, 23 June 2009

Semantically, every clause contains a verb which, in combination with the nouns present in the clause, forms a notion of an event or a state. Thematic relations classify the semantic relationships between a verb and the nouns in its clause.

For instance, the notion of kissing requires an agent and a patient (sometimes called a theme) to make a complete semantic event. These thematic relations are expressed through nouns, so we may say that in (1) Smith takes the agent thematic role, and Jones takes the patient (or theme) thematic relation.

1) Smith kissed Jones.

Smith takes the agent role because he or she is the one who does the kissing. Jones takes the patient thematic role because he or she is the one being kissed.

Linguists disagree on what an exhaustive inventory of thematic relations would consist of. However, the following are widely accepted (adapted from Carnie 2006):

Agents do or precipitate the action
Experiencers feel or perceive an event
Themes are moved, experienced or perceived
Goals are entities toward which movement occurs
Sources are entities from which movement occurs
Locations are the places in which events occur
Instruments are used to perform an action
Beneficiaries are those for whom an event takes place

Note that many of these thematic roles correlate with traditional case distinctions. Thematic relations are considered purely semantic classes, and one syntactic argument may bear more than one thematic role. But clearly thematic roles do have an effect on syntax; in some generative grammars this interface with syntactic structure is handled through theta roles.

See Also

External Links

References

  • Carnie, Andrew. 2006. Syntax: A Generative introduction. 2nd Edition. Blackwell Publishers.