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In [[linguistics]], a '''cognate object''' (
==Examples==
In English, the construction can occur with a number of intransitive verbs, which then become transitive:▼
*''He smiled a charming smile.'' (He smiled, and his smile was charming.)
*''He danced a cheerful dance.'' (He danced, and his dance was cheerful.)
In some of these cases, the cognate object allows for a simpler construction
▲In English, the construction can occur with a number of intransitive verbs:
| last = Levin
▲*''He slept a troubled sleep.'' (i.e., He slept, and his sleep was troubled.)
| first = Beth
▲*''He laughed a bitter laugh.'' (i.e., He laughed bitterly.)
| title = English Verb Classes and Alternations: A Preliminary Investigation
▲*''He died a painful death.'' (i.e., He died painfully.)
| year = 1993
▲*''He dreamed a strange dream.'' (i.e., He dreamed, and his dream was strange.)
| url = https://archive.org/details/englishverbclass00levi_914
▲*''He walked their walk and talked their talk.'' (i.e., He walked and talked as they did.)
| url-access = limited
| publisher = The University of Chicago Press
▲In some of these cases, the cognate object allows for a simpler construction; in others, it may simply be chosen for [[idiom]]atic or [[rhetoric]]al reasons. In general, the cognate object's modifiers are in some sense modifying the verb: for example, ''He slept a troubled sleep'' tells how he slept.
| ___location = Chicago and London
| pages = [https://archive.org/details/englishverbclass00levi_914/page/n112 95]–6
}}</ref>
==See also==
* [[Antanaclasis]]
*[[Pleonasm]] (the use of more words than necessary to express an idea)▼
* [[Figura etymologica]]
*[[Polyptoton]] (a stylistic scheme in which words derived from the same root are repeated)▼
* [[Hendiadys]]
* [[Legal doublet]]
* [[Merism]]
▲* [[Pleonasm]] (the use of more words than necessary to express an idea)
▲* [[Polyptoton]] (a stylistic scheme in which words derived from the same root are repeated)
==References==
{{
{{Wiktionary|cognate accusative}}
[[Category:Linguistics]]▼
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