Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language, College Edition. N. Y. : The World Publishing Co., 1966. [WNWD) Webster 's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language-Unabridged. Springfield, Mass : G. & C Merriam Company Publishers, 1966. [Webster3] Aldington, R. 1960. "Introduction to Apocalipse." London : Ileinemann, New English Dramatists 12 : Radio Plays. Middlesex : Penguin Books Ltd., n. d. [Radio Play) Russell, R. W. 1956. Wontan's World. Tokyo : Kenkyusha. Saint-ExupCry, A. de. 1971. The Little Prince. Tr. Katherine Woods. Harmondsworth, Middlesex : Penguin Books. [Little Prince] A Syntactico-Semantic Analysis of the English Verb DO - Toward a lexicological network of description - Yukiyoshi NAK AMUR A Many of the dictionaries of the English language are at least based mainly on classificatory principles of description. Accordin.gly, it is the usual practice to divide the main verb do first into the transitive and the intransitive verb an.d then subdivide each of them further into a certain number of syntactico-semantic items. But suppose, for example, that there is any transitive item i which is found to share a certain property with any intransitive item j, and suppose that the property be of a kind other than what can be explained by the fact that they both belong to the same superordinate category, namely the main verb here. Then it must follow that the shared property can be explained only when we have, in addition to the classificatory system, at least one other new kind of system available. This new system will enable us to relate two arbitrary subclasses to each other because of an arbitrary syntactic and/or semantic property shared by them. Some such possibilities are explored, rather informally, in this paper.