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Tara2 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Causee

(3) Dr. Sheppard killed Roger Ackroyd.
kill: CAUSE(x, BECOME(y, DEAD))
 these verbs have CAUSE in their lexical decomposition, along with another action/verbal
predicate, but these components are not separable at the surface
 the `internal predicate' is intransitive; its argument is a ected by the verb (causee)



Can you please explain what is "the verb causee" please?

  

Top answer

Tara2 its argument is a ff ected by the verb (causee) I'm not really sure what the writer is trying to say there. It seems to be a roundabout way of saying that in the sentence Dr. Sheppard killed Roger Ackroyd , Ackroyd (the causee) is affected by Sheppard (the causer).

  • Tara2 its argument is a ff ected by the verb (causee) I'm not really sure what the writer is trying to say there.
  • It seems to be a roundabout way of saying that in the sentence Dr.
  • Sheppard killed Roger Ackroyd , Ackroyd (the causee) is affected by Sheppard (the causer).
  • Maybe someone else can help you disentangle the explanation.
  • Meanwhile, the following may shed some light on the word "causee".
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1 Answers
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Tara2its argument is aff ected by the verb (causee)

I'm not really sure what the writer is trying to say there. It seems to be a roundabout way of saying that in the sentence Dr. Sheppard killed Roger Ackroyd, Ackroyd (the causee) is affected by Sheppard (the causer). Maybe someone else can help you disent

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