In DGS, plain, agreeing and spatial verbs [Lexicon 3.2] can be distinguished, whether they show agreement with their syntactic arguments or not. Plain verbs are lexically specified for a place of articulation and path movement and do not show manual agreement. Agreement verbs, however, show manual agreement with subject and/or object by modulation of path movement and/or finger orientation. Spatial verbs agree with points in signing space that are linked to locative arguments. Furthermore, verbs can combine with classifier handshapes that denote physical and geometrical properties of the entities they belong to.
Verb type has an impact on the word order in DGS. In sentences with forward (a) and backward agreement (b) verbs, word order is usually SOV as demonstrated below. In sentences with plain verbs, however, word order is more flexible, thus it can be either SOV as in (c) or SVO as in (d). Word order in sentences with a predicate classifier is mostly SOV as in (e).
a. mother3a often child3b++ 3ascold3b++
โMother often tells the children.โ
b. poss1 frienda poss1 ex-partnerbbinvitea
โMy friend invited my ex-partner.โ
c. poss1 colleague unsuccessful ix(loc)anew work look-for
โMy colleague is unsuccessfully looking for new job there.โ
d. girl little ix3a like poss3a doll
โThe little girl likes her doll.โ
e. ix1pl table glass++ cl:put_on
โWe put the glasses on the table.โ