Transitivity Analysis Processes Particip
Transitivity Analysis Processes Particip
bit
process
the postman
participant
yesterday
circumstance
Types of Process
SFL typically recognises 4 main types of processes:
Material (doing ): kick, run, paint, repair, send, burn,
Mental (experiencing or sensing): see, hear, know, like
Verbal (saying): say, tell, warn, argue, ask,
Relational (being or becoming): be, have, become, ...
Sometime also recognised:
Behavioural (laugh, talk, cry, breath),
Existential (exist. there is)
John
drove
Actor
Mary
Process
home
Goal
Circ: destination
Mary
was driven
home
by John
Goal
Process
Circ: destination
Actor
John
Senser
Cognition:
John
saw
Process
Phenomenon
thought
Senser
Emotion:
Mary
Senser
Mary
Process
liked
Phenomenon
what he liked
Process
Phenomenon
told
Sayer
Process
Addressee
John
was told
to go
Addressee
Mary
Process
to go
Verbiage
by Mary
Verbiage
Sayer
is
Carrier
tall
Process
Attribute
owns
Possessor
Process
a Mercedes
Possession
is
Token
Process
the president
Value
Some hints
Some rules:
1. Verbal and mental process must either have a clausal
complement (the projection):
I say to go / I told him that he was wrong
I felt that he should go / I like swimming in the sea
or if no clausal projection, thew verb must allow one:
I said something / I told him a story
2. Perceptual verbs with a non-conscious agent are not
mental, but closer to relational (assigning an attribute):
The table feels smooth
Something smells burnt
Circumstances
Circumstances: any kind of contingent fact or subsidiary
situation which is associated with the process or the main
situation
The museum is round the corner
Do it gently.
He watered the garden with a hose
I left because I was tired.
Type Subtype PROBE EXAMPLE