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-===== Verb classes / Valence ===== 
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-  <span class="​glyphicon glyphicon-bullhorn" aria-hidden="​true"></​span>​ +<div class="​panel panel panel-info">​ 
-  We encourage participants to bring dataquestions and or problems on the relevant topics of each session.+  <!-- Default panel contents --> 
 +  <div class="​panel-heading"><​h2><​strong>​Clases verbales / Valencia</​strong></​h2></​div>​ 
 + 
 +  <!-- Table --> 
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 +    <​tr>​ 
 +      <​td><​span class="​glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"​ aria-hidden="​true"></​span></​td>​ 
 +      <​td>​Wednesday 13 | 13:00-15:00 | <a href="​doku.php?​id=es:​programme#​sesiones_de_trabajo"​ target="​_blank">​Sesiones de trabajo</​a></​td>​ 
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 +      <​td><​a href="​doku.php?​id=fr:​enpratique&#​lieux_de_reunion"​ target="​_blank">​Sala E. Léger, ISH (sótano)</​a></​td>​ 
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 +      <​td><​span class="​glyphicon glyphicon-comment"​ aria-hidden="​true"></​span></​td>​ 
 +      <​td><​img src="​lib/​exe/​fetch.php?​media=wiki:​icon_langue-es-100px.png"​ alt="​español"​ style="​width:​30px;​ border:​none;"​ /> Réunion interna</​td>​ 
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 +  <span class="​glyphicon glyphicon-exclamation-sign" aria-hidden="​true"></​span> ​Animamos a los participantes a traer datospreguntas y/o problemas relacionados con los temas de cada sesión.
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-This session reviews the subcategories of verb roots, as well as the derivational morphology that derives new members of each class. +**This session reviews the subcategories of verb roots, as well as the derivational morphology that derives new members of each class.** 
-  * Intransitive ​Sp: There are many intransitive ​Sp roots. Intransitive ​Sp stems may be derived only from noun roots plus intransitive verbalizing suffixes. + 
-  * Transitive: There are many transitive roots. Transitive stems are derived from noun roots plus transitive verbalizing suffixes, or from intransitive ​Sp stems plus one of 2-4 transitivizing (distinct from causative) suffixes. +<WRAP group> 
-  * Ditransitive:​ There are only two or three ditransitive roots, verbs meaning ‘give’, ‘present’ and ‘put’. Ditransitive stems are productively derived from transitive stems plus a causative suffix. +<WRAP half column justify> 
-  * Intransitive ​Sa: There are usually fewer than 10 Intransitive ​Sa roots. Intransitive ​Sa stems are derived from transitive stems or ditransitive stems by the addition of a detransitivizing prefix. +  * !!Intransitive!! S<​sub>​P</​sub>​: There are many !!intransitive!! S<​sub>​P</​sub> ​roots. ​!!Intransitive!! S<​sub>​P</​sub> ​stems may be derived only from noun roots plus intransitive verbalizing suffixes. 
-  ​* ​Intransitive ​Sa stems behave crosslinguistically like “middle” verbs: semantics can be reflexive, reciprocal, anticausative,​ passive, antipassive,​ idiosyncratic (i.e. not predictable from meaning of the transitive verb) and sometimes deponent (no transitive verb identifiable). +  * !!Transitive!!: There are many !!transitive roots!!!!Transitive stems!! are derived from noun roots plus transitive verbalizing suffixes, or from !!intransitive!! S<​sub>​P</​sub>​ !!stems!! plus one of 2-4 transitivizing (distinct from causative) suffixes. 
-There are also a few meaning-changing derivational suffixes, usually coding aspect: most common are the completive (to completely finish) and iterative ‘do multiple times’, but some languages (e.g. Makushi) have innovated others, like inchoative (begin), terminative (stop, finish), ​ conative (try unsuccessfully) and ‘finally’.+  * !!Ditransitive!!: There are only two or three !!ditransitive roots!!, verbs meaning ‘give’, ‘present’ and ‘put’. ​!!Ditransitive stems!! are productively derived from !!transitive stems!! plus a causative suffix. 
 +  * !!Intransitive!! S<​sub>​A</​sub>​: There are usually fewer than 10 !!Intransitive ​S<​sub>​A</​sub> ​roots!!!!Intransitive ​S<​sub>​A</​sub> ​stems!! are derived from !!transitive stems!! or !!ditransitive stems!! by the addition of a detransitivizing prefix. 
 +</​WRAP>​ 
 + 
 +<WRAP half column justify>​ 
 +!!Intransitive!! S<​sub>​A</​sub> ​stems behave crosslinguistically like “middle” verbs: semantics can be reflexive, reciprocal, anticausative,​ passive, antipassive,​ idiosyncratic (i.e. not predictable from meaning of the transitive verb) and sometimes deponent (no transitive verb identifiable).\\ 
 +\\ 
 +There are also a few meaning-changing derivational suffixes, usually coding aspect: most common are the !!completive!! (to completely finish) and iterative ‘do multiple times’, but some languages (e.g. Makushi) have innovated others, like !!inchoative!! (begin), ​!!terminative!! (stop, finish),  ​!!conative!! (try unsuccessfully) and ‘finally’. 
 +</​WRAP>​ 
 +</​WRAP>​