In
linguistics, a 'grammatical agent' is the
participant of a situation that carries out the
action in this situation. Also, ''agent'' is the name of the
thematic role (also known as the
thematic relation) with the above definition. The word comes from a participle of the Latin verb, ''agere''.
Typically, the situation is denoted by a
sentence, the action by a
verb in the sentence, and the agent by a
noun phrase.
For example, in the sentence "Jack kicked the ball", ''Jack'' is the agent. In certain languages, the agent is
declined or otherwise marked to indicate its grammatical role. In
Japanese, for instance, the agent is typically affixed with |ga| (the
hiragana が). Although
Modern English does not mark grammatical role, agency is informally represented using certain conventions; for instance, with the
morphemes "-ing", "-er", or "-or", as in "eating", "user", or "prosecutor". (Cf.
agent noun.)
The notion of agency is easy to grasp intuitively but notoriously difficult to define: typical qualities that a grammatical agent often has are that it has volition, is sentient or perceives, causes a change of state, or moves. These are in fact the qualities that Dowty included in his definition of a Proto-Agent, and according to his theory, the nominal with the most elements of the Proto-Agent and the fewest elements of the Proto-Patient tended to be treated as the agent in a sentence. This solves problems that most semanticists have with deciding on the number and quality of thematic roles. For example, in the sentence ''His energy surprised everyone'', ''His energy'' is the agent, even though it does not have most of the typical agent-like qualities such as perception, movement, or volition.
The grammatical agent is often confused with the
subject, but these two notions are quite distinct: the former is based explicitly on its relationship to the
verb, whereas the latter is based on the
flow of information, word order, and importance to the sentence. In a sentence such as "The boy kicked the ball", "the boy" is the agent ''and'' the subject. However, when the sentence is rendered in the
passive voice, "The ball was kicked by the boy", "the ball" is the grammatical subject, but "the boy" is still the agent. Many sentences in English and other
Indo-European languages have the agent as subject.