Sluicing
volume
British pronunciation/slˈuːsɪŋ/
American pronunciation/ˈsɫusɪŋ/

Definitie & Betekenis van "sluicing"

01

pouring from or as if from a sluice

01

sluicing (in grammaticale context)

a syntactic construction in which a question or a clause is reduced to a wh-phrase or a wh-word, leaving the rest of the sentence or the antecedent of the wh-phrase unpronounced but recoverable from the context

What is "sluicing"?

Sluicing is a syntactic phenomenon where part of a clause is omitted, typically leaving behind a wh-word and a gap, often used to create a more concise question or to focus on a specific piece of information. This structure usually occurs after an initial clause that provides context. For example, in the sentence "I met someone, but I do not remember who," the clause "who" stands in for the omitted information about the person met. Sluicing is common in conversational language and helps to avoid redundancy while still conveying essential details. Understanding sluicing is important for recognizing how information can be efficiently communicated in both spoken and written language.

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