nonnullsubject
Nonnullsubject is a term used in linguistic typology to denote the subject in a finite clause that is overt and non-elided. It is used in contrast to null-subject (pro-drop) phenomena, where the subject pronoun or noun phrase can be omitted and the reference inferred from verb morphology or context. The label is not universally standardized and appears mainly in discussions contrasting languages with obligatory surface subjects with those that permit ellipsis of the subject.
Usage and implications: In descriptions of nonnull-subject languages, the subject is typically required to surface as
Examples: English exemplifies the nonnull-subject pattern in ordinary finite clauses, as in The cat sleeps. By
Relationship to theory: The term is related to the overt-subject versus pro-drop distinction and to broader
See also: null subject, pro-drop languages, overt subject, subject-verb agreement.