vadinama
Vadinama is a term used in linguistic typology to describe a class of deverbal nominalizations found in a hypothetical group of languages. In this account, vadinama forms are created by attaching a derivational suffix to a verb stem, yielding a noun that denotes an event, action, or state related to the original verb. The construction is typically analyzed as a productive mechanism for turning verbs into concrete or abstract nouns without changing the lexical category of the base verb.
Etymology and scope. The term vadinama was coined by a group of researchers studying nominalization patterns
Morphology and syntax. In languages with vadinama formation, the resulting noun often participates fully in noun
Semantics and usage. Vadinama nouns commonly express events, activities, or states rather than concrete objects. They
See also: nominalization, deverbal noun, derivational morphology.