Home

instrumentaldativelike

Instrumentaldativelike is a term used in linguistic typology to describe a class of constructions in which a single form or construction encodes both instrumental meaning (means by which an action is performed) and dative-like semantics (recipient, beneficiary, or goal). It is not a standard, universal category; rather, it is a descriptive label applied in specific grammars to account for overlap between instrumental and dative patterns.

The form may be a case marker, a postposition, clitic, or a syntactic particle. When used with

Cross-linguistically, instrumentaldativelike patterns may arise through semantic broadening, syncretism, or grammaticalization, often reflecting a grammatical economy

Researchers distinguish it from pure instrumental or dative by examining selectional restrictions, compatibility with verbs, and

Because instrumentaldativelike is not a universally defined category, its exact definition varies across grammars. It is

a
verb,
it
conveys
instrumental
meaning
and,
in
some
contexts,
a
beneficiary
or
recipient
function,
producing
a
hybrid
interpretation.
The
same
form
can
appear
with
ditransitives
to
mark
the
recipient
while
also
serving
as
the
instrument
for
the
action.
where
instrument
and
dative-like
roles
are
not
strictly
distinct.
Its
behavior
may
be
sensitive
to
aspect,
valency,
or
voice;
for
example,
a
form
might
be
obligatory
with
certain
verbs
or
optional
with
others.
the
range
of
semantic
readings.
Corpus
or
elicitation
data,
diachronic
change,
and
cross-language
comparison
help
determine
whether
a
form
is
truly
instrumentaldativelike
or
simply
a
case
of
polysemy
or
alignment.
most
useful
as
a
heuristic
for
describing
overlap
between
instrument
and
dative
semantics,
and
it
highlights
how
case
systems
can
merge
functional
domains
in
the
boundary
areas
of
syntax
and
semantics.