• Ditransitive

    Origin

    - + di + transitive

    Full definition of ditransitive

    Adjective

    ditransitive

    1. (grammar) Of a class of verbs which take both a direct and an indirect object. An example is 'give', which entails a giver (subject), a gift (direct object) and a receiver (indirect object).
      • 1988, Andrew Radford, Transformational grammar: a first course Chapter 7, So far, we have considered only transitive Verbs which take a single NP Complement. However, there are a subset of transitive Verbs (known as ditransitive Verbs) which can take two NP Complements, as illustrated in (16) below (where the NP Complements are bracketed):
        (16) (a)      John gave Mary present

        (16) (b)      The postman handed me parcel
        (16) (c)      He showed her credentials
        (16) (d)      He sent mother flowers
        (16) (e)      Never promise anyone anything
        The relevant subcategorisation frame for Verbs used in this construction will be NP NP, indicating that they can take two NP Complements.

    Hypernyms

    Derived terms

    Noun

    ditransitive

    (plural ditransitives)
    1. (grammar) A verb that takes both an object and an indirect object.
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