The Sentence

Attributive Sentences

The Attribute Function

Predicative Sentences

Passivity and Attribution

Voice or Diathesis in Spanish

Attributive Adjuncts

Attributive sentences cannot function on their own and merge with the nominal predicate.

They are sentences that have a nominal predicate.

It refers to the subject and agrees in gender and number with it.

It can be replaced by the pronoun "lo."

The attribute is a function of traditional syntax that accompanies copulative verbs (ser, estar, and parecer in Spanish).

Attributive adjuncts appear alongside non-copulative verbs and vary in number and gender, agreeing with the explicit subject.

They can be replaced by adverbial units or adverbs with modal meaning.

They can also be adjuncts of the direct object, agreeing in number and gender with it.

There is no linguistic difference between passive and attributive constructions.

Both the attribute in attributive constructions and the participle in passives can be replaced by the pronoun "lo."

Active, passive, and middle voice are forms of the relationship between the meaning of the root and the person morpheme acting as the grammatical subject.

In Spanish, a distinction is made between active and passive voice, and some authors consider the middle voice expressed through reflexive pronouns.

Predicative sentences are those that have a verbal predicate. They can be transitive (requiring a complement) or intransitive (not requiring a complement).

Yanis Dianeth Lara Pérez. Cédula: 2-741-327