adjectiveinterparticiple
Adjectiveinterparticiple is a term used in linguistics to describe forms that occupy an intermediate space between adjectives and participles. It refers to word forms that originate from verbs (present or past participles) but are analyzed, in syntax, as adjectives rather than as finite verbs, or that retain some participial properties even when used adjectivally. The concept is not universally standardized; in many grammars these forms are simply called participial adjectives or verbal adjectives. The label adjectiveinterparticiple highlights the overlap between word-class boundaries rather than proposing a separate, rigid category.
Syntactic and semantic properties of adjectiveinterparticiples vary across languages. They commonly function attributively and predicatively, like
Cross-linguistic usage shows a spectrum. In German, forms like laufend or zerbrochen behave as adjectives derived
The concept is useful in discussions of how word-class boundaries are drawn and how verbal history can