activeparticiplelike
Activeparticiplelike is a term used in linguistic discussions to describe a class of forms or constructions that resemble active participles in function and interpretation but are not themselves standard active participles. The label is not universally standardized and may appear in typological or theoretical writings to capture cross-linguistic phenomena where a non-participial form encodes ongoing action with an agentive interpretation.
Typically, activeparticiplelike forms function as modifiers rather than main verbs. They can appear attributively, as in
Distinctions from genuine active participles include their origin (not necessarily derived from a finite verb via
In practice, the concept helps describe cross-linguistic variation in how languages encode ongoing, agentive action within