In linguistics, a causative (abbreviated CAUS) is a valency-increasing operation that indicates that a subject either causes someone or something else...
66 KB (8,513 words) - 09:52, 12 September 2024
In linguistic morphology, causative mood serves to express a causal relation, e.g., a logical inference relation, between the current clause and the clause...
3 KB (412 words) - 18:45, 26 July 2024
Labile verb (redirect from Causative alternation)
linguistics, a labile verb (or ergative verb) is a verb that undergoes causative alternation; that is, it can be used both transitively and intransitively...
41 KB (5,440 words) - 06:12, 25 September 2024
Pathogen (redirect from Causative agent)
In biology, a pathogen (Greek: πάθος, pathos "suffering", "passion" and -γενής, -genēs "producer of"), in the oldest and broadest sense, is any organism...
41 KB (4,224 words) - 11:34, 24 September 2024
List of infectious diseases (redirect from Disease causative agent)
This is a list of infectious diseases arranged by name, along with the infectious agents that cause them, the vaccines that can prevent or cure them when...
55 KB (1,669 words) - 12:59, 2 September 2024
gives Lewy body disease as the causative subtype of dementia with Lewy bodies, and Parkinson's disease as the causative subtype of Parkinson's disease...
30 KB (2,968 words) - 10:25, 27 June 2024
Linguist Martin Haspelmath classifies inchoative/causative verb pairs under three main categories: causative, anticausative, and non-directed alternations...
41 KB (4,637 words) - 16:54, 4 July 2024
immune suppressed patients or as nosocomial infection. However, most causative organisms are of the community acquired type. Pathological specimens to...
7 KB (733 words) - 12:06, 25 September 2024
Japanese conjugation (section Causative)
"Lesson 22, Grammar 1: Causative Sentences". Tofugu: 〜させる (Causative). Banno et al. 2020b, pp. 254–255, "Lesson 23, Grammar 1: Causative-passive Sentences"...
129 KB (6,447 words) - 05:11, 16 September 2024
(hypothesized to be a causative variable), and e {\displaystyle e} is the error term (containing the combined effects of all other causative variables, which...
14 KB (1,828 words) - 02:22, 1 October 2024