(New) Church Slavonic belongs to the Slavic branch of the Indo-Euroepan language family. Its texts were composed during the whole second millenium AD for religious purposes of the orthodox church in various countries. The corpus used for examples of adjective valence here are texts originated in Russia, which span from 1100 to 1900 AD.
Bibliography:
Izotov A. I. 2007 Staroslavjanskij i cerkovnoslavjanskij jazyki: grammatika, uprazhnenija i teksty. Moskva: Filomatis
Cejtlin R. M., Vecherka R., Blagova E. 1994 Staroslavjanskij slovar’ (po rukopisjam X-XI v.). Moskva: Russkij jazyk
Xaburgajev G. A. 1974 Staroslavjanskij jazyk. Moskva: Prosveschenije.
Author: Kseniia Kasatova
Note: When a language has a syntactic capacity of forming an adjective valence phrase, but such phrase was not found in the corpus by the researcher, the slot is labeled "Not found". When a language does not have the capacity (e.g., does not employ certain case), the slot is labeled "No data".