Common use of Clitics Clause in Contracts

Clitics. In this grammar, clitics are defined as grammatically separate morphemes that are phonologically dependent on another word (▇▇▇▇▇ & ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ 2003). A clitic is attached to its host after phonological rules have been applied, so it usually does not receive primary stress even if it is the final syllable of a phonological word. Unlike affixes, which are more restricted in their choice of host, clitics can attach to words belonging to multiple lexical classes, or to entire clauses. There are eight categories of clitics in Sarikoli, as presented in Table 1.9: Table 1.9 Categories of clitics dicates aspect through form (perfective vs. imperfective form) and placement (attach- ing to the verb vs. preverbal element), in combination with the type of verb stem Introduced in §3.2

Appears in 2 contracts

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