GrammarNavigator

Topics

Advanced

Semantic Roles

How Spanish, English and Chinese encode who does what to whom in a sentence.

Compare languages

Semantic roles describe the underlying meaning of participants: agent, patient, experiencer, beneficiary, instrument. Languages map these roles to grammatical positions differently.

Examples

John broke the vase (agent + patient)

Juan rompió el jarrón (agent = subject, patient = object)

The vase broke (patient = subject)

El jarrón se rompió (patient = subject + se)

John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus)

Juan vio a María (experiencer = subject)

Mary is visible to John (stimulus prominent)

María es visible para Juan

John received a book (recipient)

Juan recibió un libro

The key opened the door (instrument)

La llave abrió la puerta

John opened the door with a key (agent + instrument)

Juan abrió la puerta con la llave

Passive demotion of agent

El jarrón fue roto (por Juan)

Examples

John broke the vase (agent + patient)

John broke the vase (agent = subject, patient = object)

The vase broke (patient = subject)

The vase broke (patient = subject)

John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus)

John saw Mary (experiencer = subject)

Mary is visible to John (stimulus prominent)

Mary is visible to John

John received a book (recipient)

John received a book

The key opened the door (instrument)

The key opened the door

John opened the door with a key (agent + instrument)

John opened the door with a key

Passive demotion of agent

The vase was broken (by John)

Examples

John broke the vase (agent + patient)

Yuēhànlehuāpíng (agent = subject, patient = object)

The vase broke (patient = subject)

huāpíngle (patient = subject)

John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus)

Yuēhànkànjiàn (experiencer = subject)

Mary is visible to John (stimulus prominent)

Yuēhànkàndejiàn

John received a book (recipient)

Yuēhànshōudàoleběnshū

The key opened the door (instrument)

yàoshikāilemén

John opened the door with a key (agent + instrument)

Yuēhànyòngyàoshikāilemén

Passive demotion of agent

huāpíngbèiYuēhànle

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
John broke the vase (agent + patient) Juan rompió el jarrón (agent = subject, patient = object)John broke the vase (agent = subject, patient = object)Yuēhànlehuāpíng (agent = subject, patient = object)
The vase broke (patient = subject) El jarrón se rompió (patient = subject + se)The vase broke (patient = subject)huāpíngle (patient = subject)
John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus) Juan vio a María (experiencer = subject)John saw Mary (experiencer = subject)Yuēhànkànjiàn (experiencer = subject)
Mary is visible to John (stimulus prominent) María es visible para JuanMary is visible to JohnYuēhànkàndejiàn
John received a book (recipient) Juan recibió un libroJohn received a bookYuēhànshōudàoleběnshū
The key opened the door (instrument) La llave abrió la puertaThe key opened the dooryàoshikāilemén
John opened the door with a key (agent + instrument) Juan abrió la puerta con la llaveJohn opened the door with a keyYuēhànyòngyàoshikāilemén
Passive demotion of agent El jarrón fue roto (por Juan)The vase was broken (by John)huāpíngbèiYuēhànle

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
John broke the vase (agent + patient) Juan rompió el jarrón (agent = subject, patient = object)John broke the vase (agent = subject, patient = object)Yuēhànlehuāpíng (agent = subject, patient = object)
The vase broke (patient = subject) El jarrón se rompió (patient = subject + se)The vase broke (patient = subject)huāpíngle (patient = subject)
John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus) Juan vio a María (experiencer = subject)John saw Mary (experiencer = subject)Yuēhànkànjiàn (experiencer = subject)
Mary is visible to John (stimulus prominent) María es visible para JuanMary is visible to JohnYuēhànkàndejiàn
John received a book (recipient) Juan recibió un libroJohn received a bookYuēhànshōudàoleběnshū
The key opened the door (instrument) La llave abrió la puertaThe key opened the dooryàoshikāilemén
John opened the door with a key (agent + instrument) Juan abrió la puerta con la llaveJohn opened the door with a keyYuēhànyòngyàoshikāilemén
Passive demotion of agent El jarrón fue roto (por Juan)The vase was broken (by John)huāpíngbèiYuēhànle

Examples in context

John broke the vase (agent + patient)

Spanish

Juan rompió el jarrón (agent = subject, patient = object)

English

John broke the vase (agent = subject, patient = object)

Chinese

Yuēhànlehuāpíng (agent = subject, patient = object)

The vase broke (patient = subject)

Spanish

El jarrón se rompió (patient = subject + se)

English

The vase broke (patient = subject)

Chinese

huāpíngle (patient = subject)

John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus)

Spanish

Juan vio a María (experiencer = subject)

English

John saw Mary (experiencer = subject)

Chinese

Yuēhànkànjiàn (experiencer = subject)

Mary is visible to John (stimulus prominent)

Spanish

María es visible para Juan

English

Mary is visible to John

Chinese

Yuēhànkàndejiàn

John received a book (recipient)

Spanish

Juan recibió un libro

English

John received a book

Chinese

Yuēhànshōudàoleběnshū

The key opened the door (instrument)

Spanish

La llave abrió la puerta

English

The key opened the door

Chinese

yàoshikāilemén

John opened the door with a key (agent + instrument)

Spanish

Juan abrió la puerta con la llave

English

John opened the door with a key

Chinese

Yuēhànyòngyàoshikāilemén

Passive demotion of agent

Spanish

El jarrón fue roto (por Juan)

English

The vase was broken (by John)

Chinese

huāpíngbèiYuēhànle

Key Takeaways

Key concepts compared: John broke the vase (agent + patient), The vase broke (patient = subject), John saw Mary (experiencer + stimulus).

Understanding semantic roles across languages prevents common transfer errors.

Last updated: June 4, 2026