“…Actional verb (3a) is higher in transitivity than nonactional verb (3b), because the latter does not have properties such as affectedness, intentionality, or change of state. The asymmetry between actional and nonactional passives has been widely replicated in English (Bidgood et al, 2020;Gorden & Chafetz, 1990;Hirsch & Wexler, 2006;Orfitelli, 2012;Paolazzi et al, 2021;Sudhalter & Braine, 1985) and in other languages investigating children's passive acquisition (e.g., Agostinho, 2020, for Portuguese;Gavarró & Parramon, 2017, for Catalan;Koutamanis, 2015, for Dutch;Oliva & Wexler, 2018, for Spanish;Perovic et al, 2012, for Serbian;Safari & Mehrpour, 2015, for Persian;Volpato et al, 2015, for Italian). Nguyen and Pearl's (2021) recent meta-analysis also evoke semantic factors to explain away the predicated-based asymmetry of actional and nonactional passives on passive acquisition.…”