Verb Valency in Germanic
Diachronic analysis and reconstruction of protolinguistic scenario
Diachronic analysis and reconstruction of protolinguistic scenario
Verbal valency is the number of core arguments a verb can take, hence instantiating a particular valency frame. There are for instance zero-valent verbs e.g. to rain (Eng. it rains); monovalent verbs e.g. to sleep (Eng. I sleep); bivalent verbs e.g. to kiss (Eng. the girl kisses the boy); trivalent verbs e.g. to give (Eng. the boy gives a present to the girl); etc. The project’s overarching aim is to map out and analyze the valency patterns of Germanic. This is done by selecting a number of representative language varieties within Germanic (= Gmc) and by tracing the evolution and variation of valency patterns for a selection of verb meanings, following the methodological gold standard set out by the ValPaL project.
The to-be-researched languages are: Gothic (East Gmc); English, German, Dutch, and Frisian (West Gmc); Icelandic and Swedish (North Gmc). The present project contributes to advancing that methodology and it is inscribed in the research activity carried out by the Pavia Linguistics Team within the Pavia Verbs Database project (PaVeDa).
The overarching aim of my project is made up of the following objectives:
1) to gather all elicited data in a digital resource;
2) to pursue a diachronic analysis of valency patterns within the history of single languages;
3) to carry out a synchronic analysis of valency patterns in the Germanic languages at different language stages;
4) to reconstruct valency patterns of Germanic in prehistoric times.
The most relevant direct outcomes of the project are:
1) to make the data available to other researchers;
2) to contribute to the actual research in diachronic morphosyntax;
3) to expand the PaVeDa database with diachronic data for Germanic;
4) to establish a well-defined benchmark within the addressed research area, by implementing a standard tool designed at the host institution.
The newest project updates are listed here.
April 2026
A preliminary version of the Old Frisian data has just been uploaded to ZENODO.
Corrected versions of the Old Norse, Old Swedish, and Modern Dutch data have just been uploaded to ZENODO.
The first round of data machine correction and alignment on the new datasets is completed. The datasets will be updated in the next few weeks and new versions published on ZENODO and in the PaVeDa.
Il Giappone all'Università di Pavia, a JSPS Alumni Italy event, took place at the University of Pavia on April 9. PHOTOS HERE.
March 2026
Registration open for the 7th Pavia Summer School for Indo-European Linguistics. Deadline: June 30. REGISTER HERE.
The publications connected with the project are listed here and are made available via the repository Zenodo.
The data generated from this project is freely available in the PaVeDa database and on ZENODO.
Conferences and workshops organized within the project are listed here together with a link to a dedicated webpage.
Discover further outreach and third mission activities connected with the project and the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions.
Further activities and research related to the study of the Indo-European and especially old Germanic languages.