AGREEMENT (LINGUISTICS)
In languages, 'agreement' is a form of cross-reference between different parts of a sentence or phrase. Agreement happens when one word changes in form depending on which other words it is being related to.
For example, one does not say ''I is'' in English, because ''is'' cannot be used when the subject is ''I''. The word ''is'' is said not to agree with the word ''I''. This is why the grammatical form is ''I am'', even though the verb still has the same function and basic meaning.
| Contents |
| Functions |
| Examples |
| English |
| Latin |
| French |
| Hungarian |
| Swahili |
| See also |
| External links |
| Bibliography |
Functions
Agreement often adds redundancy to languages. In addition, in some languages, agreement allows word order to be varied without resorting to case endings. In Swahili, with its many noun classes, if a verb's arguments have different classes, a word order other than the default SVO can be used because agreement makes it clear which words belong to the subject and which belong to the object(s). Common types of characteristics which may trigger grammatical agreement are:
★ Grammatical person: e.g. ''I am'' versus ''He is''.
★ Grammatical number: e.g. ''One car'' versus ''Two cars'', or ''I am'' versus ''We are''.
★ Grammatical gender: e.g. ''Jenny loves her cat'' versus ''Jimmy loves his cat''.
★ Grammatical case e.g. ''I told him'' versus ''He told me''.
See also Grammatical conjugation, for other agreement categories.
Examples
Languages can have no agreement whatsoever, as in Japanese; barely any, as in English; a small amount, as in spoken French; a moderate amount, as in Greek or Latin; or a large amount, as in Hungarian.
English
Modern English does not have a particularly large amount of agreement, although it is present.
All regular verbs in English agree in the third-person singular of the present indicative by adding a suffix of either ''-s'' or ''-es''. The latter is generally used after stems ending in the sibilants ''sh'', ''ch'', ''ss'' or ''zz'' (e.g. ''he rushes'', ''it lurches'', ''she amasses'', ''it buzzes''.)
Present tense of ''to love'':
| Person | Number | |
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| First | ''I love'' | ''we love'' |
| Second | ''you love'' | ''you love'' |
| Third | ''he/she/it love's''' | ''they love'' |
There are not many irregularities in this formation:
''to have'','' to go'' and ''to do'' render ''has'', ''goes'' and ''does''.
The highly irregular verb ''to be'' is the only verb with more agreement than this in the present tense.
Present tense of ''to be'':
| Person | Number | |
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| First | ''I am'' | ''we are'' |
| Second | ''you are'' | ''you are'' |
| Third | ''he/she/it is'' | ''they are'' |
Future tense of "to be":
| Person | Number | |
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| First | I shall be | we shall be |
| Second | you will be | you will be |
| Third | he/she/it will be | they will be |
Emphatic future tense of "to be":
| Person | Number | |
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| First | I will be | we will be |
| Second | you shall be | you shall be |
| Third | he/she/it shall be | they shall be |
Note: the use of ''shall'' and the use of the emphatic tense are archaic in Standard English.
In English, defective verbs generally show no agreement for person or number, they include: ''can'', ''may'', ''shall'', ''will'', ''must'', ''should'', ''ought''.
In Early Modern English agreement existed for the second person singular of all verbs in the present tense, as well as in the past tense of some common verbs. This was usually in the form ''-est'', but ''-st'' and ''-t'' also occurred. Note that this does not affect the endings for other persons and numbers.
Example present tense forms: ''thou wilt'', ''thou shalt'', ''thou art'', ''thou hast'', ''thou canst''.
Example past tense forms: ''thou wouldst'', ''thou shouldst'', ''thou wast'', ''thou hadst'', ''thou couldst''
Note also the agreement shown by ''to be'' even in the subjunctive.
Imperfect subjunctive of ''to be'' in Early modern English:
| Person | Number | |
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| First | ''(if) I were'' | ''(if) we were'' |
| Second | ''(if) thou wert'' | ''(if) you were'' |
| Third | ''(if) he/she/it were'' | ''(if) they were'' |
However, for nearly all regular verbs, a separate ''thou'' form was no longer commonly used in the past tense. Thus the auxiliary verb ''to do'' would be used, e.g.'' thou didst help'', ''not thou helpedst''.
Latin
Compared with English, Latin is an example of a highly inflected language. The consequences for agreement are thus:
Verbs must agree in person and number, and sometimes in gender, with their subjects. Articles and adjectives must agree in case, number and gender with the nouns they modify.
Sample Latin verb: the present indicative active of "porto"
:port''o'' - I carry
:port''as'' - you [singular] carry
:port''at'' - he carries
:port''amus'' - we carry
:port''atis'' - you [plural] carry
:port''ant'' - they carry
Note also that the inflectional endings mean it is not necessary to include the subject pronoun, except for emphasis, or to avoid ambiguity in complex sentences. For this reason, Latin is described as a null-subject language.
French
Spoken French always distinguishes the first person plural and the second person plural from each other and from the rest of the present tense. The other endings that appear in written French are often pronounced the same, except in liaison contexts. Irregular verbs such as ''être'', ''faire'', ''aller'', and ''avoir'' possess more distinctly-pronounced agreement forms than regular verbs.
Adjectives agree in gender and number with the nouns they modify in French. As with verbs, forms that are written with different agreement suffixes are sometimes pronounced the same (e.g. ''joli'', ''jolie''), although in many cases the final consonant is pronounced in feminine forms, but silent in masculine forms (e.g. ''petit'' vs. ''petite''). Plural forms end in ''-s'', but this consonant is only pronounced in liaison contexts. The participles of verbs agree in gender and number with the subject or object in some instances. Articles also decline for number and gender.
Hungarian
In Hungarian, verbs have polypersonal agreement, which means they agree with more than one of the verb's arguments: not only its subject but also its (accusative) object. Difference is made between the case when there is a definite object and the case when the object is indefinite or there is no object at all. (The adverbs don't affect the form of the verb.) Examples: ''Szeretek'' (I love somebody or something unspecified), ''szeretem'' (I love him or her or it or them, specifically), ''szeretlek'' (I love you); ''szeret'' (he or she loves me or us or you or someone or something unspecified), ''szereti'' (he or she loves her or him or it or them, specifically). Of course, the exact object may be specified by nouns or pronouns. In short, there is agreement between a verb and the person and number of its subject and the specificness of its object (which often refers to the person more or less exactly).
:''See Definite and indefinite conjugations''
The predicate agrees in number with the subject and if it is copulative (i.e., it consists of a noun/adjective and a linking verb), both parts agree in number with the subject. For example: ''A könyv'ek' érdekes'ek' volt'ak''' "The books were interesting" ("a": the, "könyv": book, "érdekes": interesting, "voltak": were): the plural is marked on the subject as well as both the adjectival and the copulative part of the predicate.
Within noun phrases, adjectives don't show agreeement with the noun, e.g. ''a szép könyv'eitekkel''' "with your nice books" ("szép": nice): the suffixes of the plural, the possessive "your" and the case-marking "with" are only marked on the noun.
Swahili
Swahili and related languages have numerous noun classes. Verbs must agree in class with their subjects.
See also
★ Declension
★ Inflection
★ Synthetic language
★ Redundancy (language)
★ Case government
External links
★ Agreement Biblio Home Page
★ Surrey Database of Agreement, detailed examples from 15 diverse languages
Bibliography
★ Corbett, Greville (1994) "Agreement". In R.E. Asher (ed.), ''The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics''. Oxford: Pergamon Press. 54--60.
★ Corbett, Greville (2006) ''Agreement''. Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
★ Givon, Talmy (1984) ''Syntax. A Functional Typological Introduction''. Vol 1. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Chapter 10.
★ Mel'čuk, Igor (2006): ''Aspects of the theory of morphology''. Berlin, New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Chapter 1.
★ Moravcsik, Edith A. (1978). "Agreement". In: Joseph Greenberg, (ed.), ''Universals of Human Language''. vol. 4. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 331--374.
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