Parasitic gap
volume
British pronunciation/pˌaɹəsˈɪtɪk ɡˈap/
American pronunciation/pˌæɹəsˈɪɾɪk ɡˈæp/

"parasitic gap"এর সংজ্ঞা এবং অর্থ

01

প্যারাসিটিক গ্যাপ, প্যারাসিটিক ফাঁক

a type of syntactic construction in which a gap or empty position occurs in a sentence, typically within a relative clause, and is licensed by a distant antecedent outside that clause

What is a "parasitic gap"?

A parasitic gap is a linguistic phenomenon where a gap, which indicates the absence of a word or phrase, is created in a sentence while another gap is already present. This second gap is considered "parasitic" because it relies on the first gap for its interpretation, often occurring in complex sentences with embedded clauses. For example, "He criticized the movie without really watching it," the transformation to a question would result in "What movie did he criticize _ without watching _?" Here, the first gap occurs after "criticize," while the second gap is introduced by the phrase "without watching." The interpretation of the second gap depends on the first, allowing the listener to infer the missing information. Understanding parasitic gaps is important for analyzing syntactic structures and how information is conveyed in complex sentences.

parasitic gap

n
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