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Dispersif

Dispersif, or dispersive, is a grammatical category described in some languages to encode the manner in which an action is distributed, spread, or repeated across multiple objects, participants, places, or occasions. Rather than portraying a single, unified event, a dispersive construction emphasizes distribution or iteration across several elements. The term is used in descriptive and typological grammar to capture this dispersed reading of an action.

Realization of dispersif varies across languages. It is typically marked on the verb, through affixes, reduplication,

Cross-linguistic usage is limited but attested in a number of language families worldwide. The precise semantics

Example readings often contrast with non-dispersive forms: a dispersive reading might convey that each object or

or
periphrastic
constructions,
and
it
may
interact
with
other
aspectual
distinctions
such
as
imperfective,
iterative,
or
distributive
readings.
In
some
grammars,
dispersif
is
analyzed
as
a
subtype
of
aspect;
in
others,
it
is
described
as
a
separate
mood
or
voice
that
governs
how
the
action
is
spread
over
multiple
targets
or
occasions.
of
dispersif
can
differ:
it
might
indicate
distributing
an
action
among
several
recipients,
applying
an
activity
across
several
locations,
or
repeating
an
action
across
multiple
occasions
while
foregrounding
distribution
rather
than
total
completion.
Because
it
is
described
primarily
in
specific
descriptive
grammars,
its
status
and
labeling
can
vary
between
sources
and
theories.
participant
receives
attention
or
is
acted
upon
individually,
rather
than
addressing
only
a
single
instance
of
the
action.
As
with
many
typological
categories,
dispersif
provides
a
way
to
describe
a
particular
distributed
or
iterative
reading
of
verb
meaning.