patternparticiples
Patternparticiples is a term used in some linguistic discussions to refer to a class of participial forms that reflect pattern-based or cross-linguistic regularities in morphology and syntax. The core idea is that certain participles do not only derive from verb roots but also encode recurring grammatical patterns across languages, such as aspect, state, or evidential readings, in a way that makes them particularly useful for comparative description.
Formation and typology: Patternparticiples arise through participial derivation—typically the present participle or the past participle—but their
Functions: Patternparticiples often function as adjectives modifying nouns, as part of compound predicate constructions, or as
Cross-linguistic perspective: Languages with productive participial systems that align with broader morphosyntactic patterns—such as European languages
See also: participle, verbal adjective, gerund, aspect, evidentiality.