A category being ascribed to something, or something belonging to the category denoted by the governor.
Prototypical prepositions are of (where the governor is the category) and as (where the object is the category):
The liberal state of Washington has not been receptive to Trump’s message. 002
As a liberal state, Washington has not been receptive to Trump’s message. 003
What a gem of a restaurant! [exclamative idiom: both NPs are indefinite] 005
Topic↝Identity, with a governing noun in the domain of communication or cognition:
Something may be specified with a category in order to disambiguate it #001, or to provide an interpretation or frame of reference with which that entity is to be considered. In some cases, like #009, the category is a shell noun (Schmid, 2000) requiring further specification.
Categorizations may be situational rather than permanent/definitional:
Paraphrase test: “(thing) IS (category) [in the context of the event]”: “Washington is a liberal state”, “opening a new business is a hassle”, “She is Ophelia”, etc. Note that as+category may attach syntactically to a verb, as in #004 and #011, rather than being governed by the item it describes.
If the object of the preposition is a property (as opposed to a category), the scene role is Characteristic:
Adnominal: Characteristic↝Identity
Secondary predicate adjective: Characteristic↝Identity
See also: ComparisonRef
description | A category being ascribed to something, or something belonging to the category denoted by the governor. |
---|---|
animacy | unspecified |
parent | Configuration |
deprecated | False |
deprecation_message |