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Ditransitive verb
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Everything about Ditransitive Verb totally explained

In grammar, a ditransitive verb is a verb which takes a subject and two objects. According to certain linguistics considerations, these objects may be called direct and indirect, or primary and secondary. This is in contrast to monotransitive verbs, which take only one, direct, object. In languages which mark grammatical case, it's common to differentiate the objects of a ditransitive verb using, for example, the accusative case for the direct object, and the dative case for the indirect object (but this morphological alignment isn't unique; see below). In languages without morphological case (such as English for the most part) the objects are distinguished by word order and/or context.

English usage

English has a number of generally ditransitive verbs, such as give and grant, and many transitive verbs that can take an additional argument (commonly a beneficiary or target of the action), such as pass, read, bake, etc.:
» He gave Mary ten dollars.


   He passed Paul the ball. » Jean read him the books.


   She is baking him a cake. English grammar allows for these sentences to be written alternately with a preposition (to or for):
» He gave ten dollars to Mary.


   Jean read the books to/for him., etc.
   The latter form is grammatically correct in every case, but in some dialects the former (without a preposition) is considered ungrammatical, or at least unnatural-sounding, when both objects are pronouns (as in He gave me it).
   Sometimes one of the forms is perceived as wrong for idiosyncratic reasons (idioms tend to be fixed in form) or the verb simply dictates one of the patterns and excludes the other:
» Give a break to me (grammatical, but always realized as Give me a break)


   He introduced Susan his brother (usually becomes He introduced his brother to Susan)
   In certain dialects of English, many verbs not normally treated as ditransitive are allowed to take a third argument that shows a beneficiary, generally of an action performed for oneself. » Let's catch us some fish. (some fish for us)

Again, this usage is idiomatic and therefore arbitrary, learnt only with experience.

Passive voice

Many ditransitive verbs have a passive voice form which can take a direct object. Contrast the active and two forms of the passive:
Active: » Jean gave the books to him.


   Jean gave him the books. Passive: » The books were given to him by Jean.


   He was given the books by Jean.

Attributive ditransitive verbs

There is a different kind of ditransitive verb, where the two objects are semantically an entity and a quality, a source and a result, etc. These verbs attribute one object to the other. In English, make, name, appoint, turn into and others are examples:
  • The state of New York made Hillary Clinton a Senator.
  • I will name him Galahad.

Ditransitive/monotransitive alignment

Just as the way the arguments of intransitive and transitive verbs are aligned in a given language allows one sort of typological classification, the alignment between arguments of monotransitive and ditransitive verbs allows another kind of classification. If the three arguments of a typical ditransitive verb are labeled D (for Donor; the subject of a verb like "to give" in English), T (for Theme; normally the direct object of ditransitive verb in English) and R (for Recipient, normally the indirect object in English), these can be aligned with the Agent and Patient of monotransitive verbs and the Subject of intransitive verbs in several ways, which are not completely predicted by whether the language is accusative, ergative, or active. Donor is always or nearly always in the same case as Agent, but different languages equate the other arguments in different ways:
  • Indirect languages: D=A, T=P, with a third case for R
  • Secondary languages: D=A, R=P, with a third case for T
  • Split-P languages: D=A, some monotransitive clauses have P=T, others have P=RFurther Information

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