D stem (
factitive) | paʻʻala | yapaʻʻilu | puʻʻila | yupaʻʻalu | tD stem (
factitive reflexive) | tapaʻʻala | yatapaʻʻalu N
Kaynak: Ugaritic grammarVerbal categories: causative and
factitive. Only direct objects and undergoers of passive sentences are marked by cliticized personal
Kaynak: Ledo Kaili languageverbal root kr "to make", as "to be" or bhū "to become", resulting in a
factitive verb where the ī-stem is indeclinable and used like a preverb.
Kaynak: Devi and Vrkis femininesSemantically this frequentative should be considered
factitive, thence arriving at a verb that would mean 'to cause to be given in
Kaynak: Duenos Inscriptioneh 2- seems to have formed
factitive verbs, as in new-eh 2- "to renew, make new again", as seen in Latin novāre, Greek neáō and Hittite
Kaynak: Laryngeal theorythe D-stem (functioning as a
factitive): the forms must have been /qittil/ in the suffix conjugation, /yaqattil/ in the prefix
Kaynak: Phoenician languageIn addition, the form of the
factitive suffix causes problems with verbs ending in t, as it varies depending on whether this sound is
Kaynak: Hungarian orthographyNouns occupying the semantic roles or thematic relations , of patient, theme,
factitive theme, location, goal, path, or instrument are
Kaynak: Onondaga languagesimilar verbs in the Latin -ēre conjugation),
factitive verbs in -ā- (cf. the Latin -āre conjugation), and o-grade causatives in -éye-.
Kaynak: Proto-SlavicThe causative extension makes an intransitive verb transitive, and a transitive verb
factitive. Together, the reciprocal and causative
Kaynak: Turkish grammar