Clitic
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A clitic and the word to which it attaches (called its host) are pronounced as a single unit, and this unit adheres to the grammatical rules of the language in which it is found. A clitic is never stressed, although its host might be. In formal writing, clitics are often written as separate words.
It is important to note that a clitic is not an affix. An affix syntactically and phonologically attaches to a base morpheme of a limited part of speech, such as a verb, to form a new word. A clitic syntactically functions above the word level, on the phrase or clause level, and attaches only phonetically to the first, last, or only word in the phrase or clause, whichever part of speech the word belongs to. By definition, clitics do not belong to lexical categories such as nouns, verbs, or adpositions.
Examples
In the Indo-European languages, some clitics can be traced back to Proto-Indo-European: for example, -kwe is the original form of Latin -que, Greek te, and Sanskrit -ca. This word means "and" and is said after the word being added, e.g. Senatus Populusque Romanus "Senate and People of Rome".English enclitics include:
- The abbreviated forms of be:
- * 'm in I'm
- * 're in you're
- * 's in she's
- The abbreviated forms of auxiliary verbs:
- * 'll in they'll
- * 've in they've
- To express the possessive of a phrase:
- * 's in the girl next door's cat (It's not just the door's cat.)
- a in a desk
- an in an egg
- the in the house
- a in a SQL server - pronounced a sequel server
- an in an SQL server - pronounced an ess-cue-el server
The negation suffix n't as in couldn't etc. has been proven to be an affix rather than a clitic (Zwicky & Pullum, 1983). In English, clitics must be unstressed, but not cannot be unstressed.
- I have not done it yet.
- I've not done it yet.
- I haven't done it yet.
- *I'ven't done it yet. (wrong)
- I don't know who she is. (*I don't know who she's.)
Stress also prevents cliticization as follows: I don't know who she is. (*I don't know who she's.)
-->In this case, it would be a-movement that changes where the copula goes to. So stress really has nothing to do with it here.
- Have you done it? - Yes, I have. (*Yes, I've.)
- He's not a fool. - He is a fool! (*He's a fool!) cf. He's not a genius, either.
- las aguas ("the waters") = /la'saguas/
- lo atamos ("we tied it") = /loa'tamos/
- dámelo ("give it to me") = /'damelo/
- Latin: que and, ve or, ne (yes-no question)
- Greek: te and, de but, gar for (in a logical argument), oun therefore
- Russian: ли (yes-no question), же (emphasis), не not (proclitic), бы (subjunctive)
- Japanese: all particles, such as the genitive postposition の no and the topic marker は wa
- Dutch: 't definite article of neuter nouns and third person pronoun, 'k first person pronoun, je second person pronoun, -ie third person pronoun (this one should not be written as a separate word, i.e "Doet-ie 't nog?": "Is it still working?"; lit. "Does it still do it?")
- Plautdietsch: "Deit'a't vondoag?": "Will he do it today?"
External links
See also
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