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In [[linguistics]], a '''cognate object''' (
==Examples==
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*''He laughed a bitter laugh.'' (He laughed bitterly.)
*''He dreamed a strange dream.'' (He dreamed, and his dream was strange.)
*''He walked their walk and talked their talk.'' (He walked and talked as they did.)
*''He smiled a charming smile.'' (He smiled, and his smile was charming.)
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*''He died a painful death.'' (He died painfully.)
In some of these cases, the cognate object allows for a simpler construction. In others, it may 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. Semantically, many of these verbs denote modes of nonverbal expression (laugh, smile) and bodily actions or motions (dance, walk, sleep), specifically including what Levin calls "waltz verbs," those that are [[conversion (word formation)#Verbification|zero-related]] (identical) to the names of dances.
| last = Levin
| first = Beth
| title = English Verb Classes and Alternations: A Preliminary Investigation
| year = 1993
| url = https://archive.org/details/englishverbclass00levi_914
| url-access = limited
| publisher = The University of Chicago Press
| ___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:Grammar]]
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