Nothing apparent from the sources, though there is a class of words of at least marginal interest. This is the set of verbs which Da Silva Facundes terms 'subjective descriptive intransitive verbs' (with adjectival semantics) that correspond morphologically to regular intransitive verbs, but take a limited subset of their forms. Morphologically, they have the following structure (pp. 338-342):
Normal intransitives mark a number of other categories. It is likely that at least some of the restriction is semantic (the only specific feature cited is aspect). The only specific examples given are the following, where aspect marking on the subjective desriptive intransitives is infelicitous:
regular intransitive verbs: nu-muteka-nanu-ta u-muteka-powa-ta u-muteka-ãpo-ta 1SG-run-PROG-VBLZ 3.M-run-AUGM-VBLZ 3.M-run-RANDOM-VBLZ ‘I’m running.’ ‘The fat one is running.’ ‘He/It is running at aimslessly.’ subjective descriptive intransitive verbs: ? nu-sãpaka-nanu-ta ? u-sãpaka-powa-ta ? u-sãpaka-ãpo-ta 1SG-be.tired-PROG-VBLZ 3.M-be.tired-AUGM-VBLZ 3.M-be.tired-RANDOM-VBLZ ?‘I’m getting tired.’ ?‘The fat one is tired.’ ‘He’s aimlessly tired.’
While the infelicity of progressive marking on a stative predicate seems unsurprising, the restriction against the augmentative does seem strange. In any event, Da Silva Facundes concludes (p. 284):
At the present time I can only say that it is most likely that both semantic as well as grammatical factors play a role in determining the difference between standard intransitive and subjective intransitive verbs, and that a more detailed work specifically on the class of subjective intransitive verbs is required in order to tease apart semantic from grammatical (in)compatibility with standard/subject descriptive verbs. One of the problems in accounting for the examples such as those in (11) is to tease apart cases that are ungrammatical simply because they are semantically anomalous from others where syntactic factors determine their (un)grammaticality.
Da Silva Facundes, Sidney. 2000. The language of the Apurinã people of Brazil (Maipura/Arawak). PhD thesis, State University of New York at Buffalo.