The typology of syntactic structures where an adjective is the head of the phrase is based on the character of the dependent. In general, the dependent can be a noun (or, a pronoun), an adposition plus a noun or other word form with nominal features (e.g. nominal non-finite verbal form) or a subordinating clause. Here, find a list of examples where the dependent is a gerundium.
| language | adjective type | adjective form | details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Latin | adjective - any | facilis | latin-gerundium-1-a.pdf |
| Latin | adjective - any | brevis | latin-gerundium-1-b.pdf |
| Latin | adjective - any | aequus | latin-gerundium-1-c.pdf |
| Latin | deverbal | cupidus | latin-gerundium-2-a.pdf |
| Latin | deverbal | cupidus | latin-gerundium-2-b.pdf |
Note: When a language has a syntactic capacity of forming an adjective valence phrase, but such phrase was not found in the corpus by the researcher, the slot is labeled "Not found". When a language does not have the capacity (e.g., does not employ certain case), the slot is labeled "No data".