Attribute Namespace

Core Definition

Attribute frames profile a property or quality inhering in an entity — what something is like along some dimension. The primary semantic content is the attribute value: the entity's position on a scale, its color, shape, degree of some quality, probability of some event, or evaluative assessment. Attribute frames are non-dynamic and non-relational: the property simply holds of the entity at a point in time, without requiring a second participant or any event.

Formal template:

ATTRIBUTE(Entity, Dimension, [Value/Degree])

Key participants:

  • Entity — the thing being described (may be a physical object, person, event, or abstract entity)
  • Dimension — the property axis being assessed (size, color, temperature, probability, desirability, etc.)
  • Value / Degree — the entity's position on the dimension (may be explicit or implied relative to a norm)

Attributes inhere in their entity: they cannot exist independently of something they characterize. Many attributes are gradable — they accept degree modifiers (muito, bastante, pouco, mais, menos) and comparative constructions.

Scope

Includes:

  • Physical dimensions: alto (tall), pesado (heavy), quente (hot), rápido (fast)
  • Perceptual qualities: vermelho (red), redondo (round), barulhento (loud), liso (smooth)
  • Temporal attributes: longo (long/lasting), frequente (frequent), velho (old/aged)
  • Evaluative / social: importante (important), famoso (famous), popular (popular), belo (beautiful)
  • Epistemic: provável (probable), possĂ­vel (possible), Ăłbvio (obvious), exato (accurate)
  • Personal / behavioral: inteligente (intelligent), sociável (sociable), rigoroso (strict), sincero (sincere)
  • Comparative: similar (similar), diverso (diverse), extremo (extreme)

Excludes — see other namespaces:

  • Entity type labels (nouns naming kinds of things) → Entity (mĂ©dico, carro)
  • Static connection between two entities → Relational (JoĂŁo tem X, ser parte de)
  • State holding without attribute focus → Stative (JoĂŁo está em casa, JoĂŁo Ă© brasileiro)
  • Dynamic events or changes → Eventive / Causative / Inchoative / Action

Critical boundary — Attribute vs. Stative: Both are non-dynamic. The distinction: Attribute frames foreground the property dimension being assessed and typically involve a scale or evaluative judgment. Stative frames foreground the state holding with no required scale.

  • JoĂŁo Ă© alto → Attribute (height dimension, scalar, gradable)
  • JoĂŁo está em casa → Stative (locational state, no dimension being assessed)
  • JoĂŁo Ă© mĂ©dico → Entity (category label, not a property dimension)

Subtypes

By attribute domain:

Domain Definition Example frames / LUs
Scalar / Dimensional Measurable physical properties with a quantity and unit Dimensão, Tamanho, Temperatura, Nível_de_som, Nível_de_luz, Descrição_de_velocidade, Frequência, Idade
Perceptual Qualities apprehended through the senses Cor, Qualidades_de_cor, Padronagens, Formas, Agudeza, Nível_de_som, Fase_termodinâmica
Evaluative Judgments of quality, worth, or desirability Desejabilidade, Louvabilidade, Estética, Importância, Notabilidade, Fama, Popularidade, Exemplaridade
Epistemic Probability, certainty, or evidential status Probabilidade, Chance, Possibilidade, Óbviedade, Exatidão
Personal / Behavioral Character traits or behavioral dispositions of persons Traços_de_personalidade, Propriedade_mental, Sociabilidade, Rigor, Frugalidade, Hospitalidade, Entusiasmo
Comparative / Relational Similarity, difference, or relative position Similaridade, Diversidade, Sem_comparação, Valor_extremo, Distinção
Structural Internal complexity, completeness, or integrity Completude, Complexidade_sistĂŞmica, Grau_de_processamento
Temporal Duration or temporal rate relative to a norm Descrição_de_duração, Descrição_de_taxa, Quantificação_de_taxa

Key internal distinction — absolute vs. relative to norm:

Type Features Example
Absolute value Specifies a quantity or measurement explicitly A mesa tem 2 metros (DimensĂŁo)
Relative to norm Describes deviation from a contextual or type-based standard JoĂŁo Ă© alto (deviates upward from average height)
Evaluative Positions entity on a scale of desirability or social assessment O filme Ă© Ăłtimo (Desejabilidade)

Diagnostic Tests

Test 1 — Gradability

Does the attribute accept degree modifiers (muito, bastante, pouco, mais, menos, extremamente)?

✓ João é muito alto / mais alto que Maria → ATTRIBUTE (gradable)
✓ A situação é muito grave / mais grave do que ontem → ATTRIBUTE (gradable)
✗ João está em casa (*muito em casa — ungrammatical) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Stative locational)
✗ A porta abriu (*muito abriu — ungrammatical) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Inchoative)

Test 2 — Comparison test

Can the attribute be compared across instances with mais … do que or tão … quanto?

✓ João é mais alto do que Maria → ATTRIBUTE
✓ O projeto é mais importante do que o prazo → ATTRIBUTE
✗ João foi para casa (*João foi mais para casa do que Maria — unnatural) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Transition)

Test 3 — Inherence test

Does the attribute inhere in an entity — can it be expressed as X tem [atributo] or X é [atributo]?

✓ A temperatura da sala está alta (temperature inheres in the room) → ATTRIBUTE
✓ João tem talento / João é talentoso (talent inheres in João) → ATTRIBUTE
✗ João tem um carro (possession relation, not an attribute of João) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Relational)

Test 4 — No result state required

Is the attribute a static description with no prior change event implied?

✓ João é alto (no change implied — he simply has this property) → ATTRIBUTE
✓ A cor da casa é verde (static color description) → ATTRIBUTE
✗ O vaso está quebrado (implies prior breaking event) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Inchoative result state)

Test 5 — Scale / dimension test

Does the attribute position the entity on some dimension — physical, evaluative, epistemic, or behavioral?

✓ provável (epistemic scale: impossible → inevitable) → ATTRIBUTE
✓ famoso (social scale: unknown → famous) → ATTRIBUTE
✓ vermelho (color space / perceptual dimension) → ATTRIBUTE
✗ médico (category label, no scale) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Entity)
✗ está em casa (location state, no evaluative/scalar dimension) → NOT ATTRIBUTE (Stative)

Comparison with Adjacent Namespaces

Feature Attribute Entity Stative Relational Inchoative
Primary LU type Adjective / scalar noun Noun Copular predicate Relational verb/noun Verb
Profiles Property on dimension Entity type State holding Connection between entities Entry into state
Gradable Typically yes No No No No
Dynamic No No No No Yes
Participants 1 (entity + attribute) 1 1 ≥ 2 1

vs. Stative: The most important boundary. Both are non-dynamic descriptions. The key test is gradability and dimension: Attribute frames involve a scale or evaluable property (alto, importante, provável) that can be compared across instances. Stative frames describe a condition, location, category, or relation that holds (estar em casa, ser brasileiro, ter filhos) without necessarily invoking a gradient scale. Stative frames with scalar adjectives (João é alto) blur the boundary — classify as Attribute when the dimension/scale is the semantic core.

vs. Entity: Attribute frames describe properties of entities; Entity frames name types of entities. The LU type is the primary signal: adjectives and scalar predicates → Attribute; nouns naming classes → Entity. When a noun names a property (a altura de João — João's height), it evokes the Attribute namespace; when a noun names a category (médico, carro), it evokes Entity.

vs. Relational: Both apply to entities without profiling events. Attribute frames describe a property inhering in a single entity. Relational frames describe a connection between two entities. João é rigoroso (Attribute — rigidity is a personal trait of João alone) vs. João é professor de Maria (Relational — the teaching relation connects João and Maria). A key test: if removing the second participant makes the predicate senseless → Relational; if it still makes sense → Attribute.

vs. Inchoative: Inchoative frames describe the transition into a state; Attribute frames describe the state itself. The result state of an inchoative event (está quebrado, está aberto) looks like an attribute but implies a prior change — classify these as Inchoative result states, not Attribute.