Cognate object

In linguistics, a cognate object (also known as a cognate accusative or an internal accusative[1]) is a verb's object which is etymologically related to the verb.

More specifically, the verb is one that is ordinarily intransitive (lacking any object), and the cognate object is simply the verb's noun form.

Cognate objects exist in many languages, including various unrelated ones; for example,[2] they exist in Arabic, Chichewa, German, Ancient Greek,[3] Hebrew, Icelandic, Korean, Latin[4] Russian and Japanese In English, the construction can occur with a number of intransitive verbs, which then become transitive: In some of these cases, the cognate object allows for a simpler construction.

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 zero-related (identical) to the names of dances.