Ergative Verbs 

B2 – Upper Intermediate

Ergative Verb

An ergative verb, also known as a labile verb can appear in both:

  • a transitive structure (with a direct object), and
  • an intransitive structure (where the object becomes the subject)

Crucially, the same participant is involved in both forms.


Diagnostics

To identify an ergative verb:

  1. Can the object become the subject without passive marking?
  2. Does the meaning remain plausible without an agent?
  3. Does it describe a change of state?

Basic Alternation Pattern

Transitive:

  • She broke the glass.

Intransitive:

  • The glass broke.

“The glass” is:

  • Direct object in the first sentence
  • Subject in the second

This alternation is called the causative–inchoative alternation.


Key Property

Unlike passives:

  • The glass was broken. (passive: implies an agent)
  • The glass broke. (ergative: no agent implied)

Ergative forms often suggest spontaneity or lack of external cause.


Common Ergative Verbs

Change-of-state verbs

  • break, melt, freeze, crack, shatter, dissolve

Change-of-position/state

  • open, close, start, stop, roll, turn

Examples:

  • She opened the door. / The door opened.
  • They melted the butter. / The butter melted.
  • He rolled the ball. / The ball rolled.

Semantic Constraints

Not all verbs alternate.

Typically ergative:

  • involve physical or observable change
  • allow affected entity to be subject

Not ergative:

  • Correct: She kicked the ball.
  • Incorrect: The ball kicked.

Because “kick” requires an agent—it doesn’t describe a spontaneous change.


Subtle Meaning Differences

Even when both forms are grammatical, meaning can shift:

  • She closed the door. → intentional action
  • The door closed. → may imply automatic or unintentional action

Ergative vs Passive 

FeatureErgativePassive
Agent expressed?NoOptional (“by…”)
FormActivePassive (be + past participle)
FocusChange of stateAction done to object

Compare:

  • The window broke. (ergative)
  • The window was broken (by someone). (passive)

Extended Patterns

a. With adverbs (cause implied)

  • The door suddenly opened.
  • The ice slowly melted.

Still ergative, even with implied cause.


b. Instrument subjects (borderline cases)

  • The key opened the door.

Not ergative—this is still transitive with a non-human agent.


Cross-Linguistic Insight

The term “ergative” comes from ergative-absolutive languages, where:

  • subjects of intransitive verbs pattern like objects of transitive verbs

English is not ergative, but these verbs show ergative-like behavior.


Less Obvious Ergative Verbs

Some are less intuitive:

  • The price increased. / They increased the price.
  • The temperature dropped. / They dropped the temperature.
  • The software crashed. / The update crashed the software.

Ergative vs Middle Voice 

  • This book sells well. (middle voice)
  • The book sold quickly. (ergative-like)

Middle voice focuses on general property, not a specific event.


Common Errors

Incorrect: The cake baked by itself. (when meaning passive)
Correct: The cake baked. (ergative, neutral)
Correct: The cake was baked. (passive, agent implied)

Incorrect: The ball kicked.
Correct: The ball rolled.
Correct: The ball bounced.


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