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Postverbal

Postverbal is a linguistic term used to describe a constituent that occurs after the verb within a clause. The label is used to distinguish elements that follow the verb from those that precede it (preverbal). The postverbal position can apply to various syntactic elements, including objects, adverbials, clitics or particles, negation, and certain subordinate or complementizer phrases. The interpretation of postverbal position depends on the language’s typical word order and the functional role of the element.

In practice, postverbal elements are common in languages with flexible or multiple word orders. For example,

Cross-linguistic variation means that what counts as postverbal can differ between languages and constructions. Some languages

See also: preverbal, word order, clitic, object position, syntax.

in
many
SVO
languages,
direct
and
indirect
objects
are
postverbal
with
respect
to
the
verb,
as
in
She
read
a
book.
Adverbials
can
also
appear
postverbally,
as
in
He
spoke
yesterday.
In
languages
that
employ
clitics
or
particles,
these
markers
may
attach
to
the
verb
or
to
its
auxiliary
after
the
verb,
signaling
aspects
such
as
tense,
mood,
or
aspect,
or
marking
agreement.
show
strong
tendencies
for
postverbal
objects
or
modifiers,
while
others
restrict
postverbal
position
to
specific
syntactic
environments,
such
as
coordinated
structures
or
verb-initial
clauses.