User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
From late Latin encliticus, from Greek εγκλιτικος, from εγκλινειν ‘lean on’, from ἐν- + κλίνειν ‘to lean, incline’.Pronunciation
- /ɪnˈklɪtɪk/, /ɛnˈklɪtɪk/
- Rhymes: -ɪtɪk
Noun
- A clitic which joins with the preceding word. In English, the possessive 's is an example.
See also
Extensive Definition
In linguistics, a clitic is a
grammatically independent and phonologically dependent
word. It is pronounced like
an affix, but works at the
phrase level. For
example, the English
possessive
-'s is a clitic; in the phrase the girl next door’s cat, -’s is
phonologically attached to the preceding word door while
grammatically combined with the phrase the girl next door, the
possessor.
Clitics may belong to any grammatical category,
though they are commonly pronouns, determiners, or adpositions.
Classification
A clitic that precedes its host is called a
proclitic.
- English: an apple
A clitic that follows its host is called an
enclitic.
- Latin: Senatus Populusque Romanus ("Senate people-and Roman" = "The Senate and Roman people")
A mesoclitic appears between the stem of the
host and other affixes.
- Portuguese: Ela levá-lo-ia. ("She take-it-COND" = "She would take it.")
A final type of clitic, the endoclitic, splits
apart the root and is inserted between the two pieces. Endoclitics
defy the
Lexical Integrity Hypothesis (Lexicalist
Hypothesis) and so were long claimed to be impossible, but
evidence from the Udi language
suggests that they do exist. Endoclitics are also found in Pashto..
In addition to Udi and Pashto, endoclitics are reported to exist in
Degema.
Properties of clitics
Some clitics can be understood as elements undergoing a historical process of grammaticalization:- lexical item → clitic → affix
One characteristic shared by many clitics is a
lack of prosodic
independence. A clitic attaches to an adjacent word, known as its
host. Orthographic conventions treat clitics in different ways:
Some are written as separate words, some are written as one word
with their hosts, and some are attached to their hosts, but set off
by punctuation (a hyphen or an apostrophe, for example).
Although the term "clitic" can be used
descriptively to refer to any element whose grammatical status is
somewhere in between a typical word and a typical affix, linguists
have proposed various definitions of "clitic" as a technical term.
One common approach is to treat clitics as words that are
prosodically deficient: they cannot appear without a host, and they
can only form an accentual unit in combination with their host. The
term "postlexical clitic" is used for this narrower sense of the
term.
Given this basic definition, further criteria are
needed to establish a dividing line between postlexical clitics and
morphological affixes, since both are characterized by a lack of
prosodic autonomy. There is no natural, clear-cut boundary between
the two categories (since from a historical point of view, a given
form can move gradually from one to the other by morphologization).
However, by identifying clusters of observable properties that are
associated with core examples of clitics on the one hand, and core
examples of affixes on the other, one can pick out a battery of
tests that provide an empirical foundation for a clitic/affix
distinction.
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. The results
of applying these criteria sometimes reveal that elements that have
traditionally been called "clitics" actually have the status of
affixes (e.g. the Romance pronominal clitics discussed below).
Clitics do not always appear next to the word or
phrase that they are associated with grammatically. They may be
subject to global word order constraints that act on the entire
sentence. Many languages, for example, obey "Wackernagel's
Law", which requires clitics to appear in "second position", after
the first syntactic phrase or the first stressed word in a clause:
- Czech: Kde se to stalo? ("Where REFL that happened" = "Where did that happen?")
Several clitics appearing in the same position
(sharing the same host) form a "clitic cluster". The relative order
of clitics in a cluster is usually strictly fixed (just as affixes
appear in a strict order within a single word):
- Czech: Nechtěli jsme vám ho dát. ("NOT-wanted 1PL to-you it give" = "We didn't want to give it to you.")
- Polish: Ty widziałbyś go jutro. ("you saw-COND-2sg him tomorrow" = "You would see him tomorrow.")
Clitics in English
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
English proclitics include:
- a ____ in a desk
- an ____ in an egg
- the ____ in the house
The contraction n’t as in couldn’t etc. has been
shown to have the properties of an affix, rather than a syntactically
independent clitic. In English, clitics must be unstressed, but not
as a full word 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. (dialectal non-standard)
Stress also prevents cliticization as follows:
- I don’t know who she is. (*I don't know who she’s.)
- 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.
Clitics in Romance
In the Romance
languages, the articles and direct and
indirect object personal
pronoun forms are clitics. In Spanish,
for example:
- las aguas [laˈsaɣwas] ("the waters")
- lo atamos [loaˈtamos] ("it tied-1PL" = "we tied it")
- dámelo [ˈdamelo] ("give me it")
According to most criteria, in fact, the
pronominal clitics in most of the Romance languages have already
developed into affixes.
There is still some debate as to whether or not
this change from clitic to affix has occurred with French subject
pronouns. Subject pronouns, especially, are still considered
clitics as they force a topicalized reading of a coindexed XP.
Some dialects of Portuguese (such as that spoken
in Portugal) allow
clitic object pronouns to surface as mesoclitics:
- Ela levá-lo-ia ("She take-it-would" — "She would take it").
- Eles dar-no-lo-ão ("They give-us-it-will" — "They will give it to us").
Further examples
In the Indo-European
languages, some clitics can be traced back to Proto-Indo-European:
for example, *-kwe is the original form of Sanskrit च, Greek
τε, and
Latin
-que.
- Latin: -que and, -ve or, -ne (yes-no question)
- Greek: τε and, δέ but, γάρ for (in a logical argument), οὖν therefore
- Russian: ли (yes-no question), же (emphasis), то (emphasis), не "not" (proclitic), бы (subjunctive)
- Dutch: 't definite article of neuter nouns and third person singular neuter pronoun, 'k first person pronoun, je second person singular pronoun, ie third person masculin singular pronoun, ze third person plural pronoun
- Plautdietsch: "Deit'a't vondoag?": "Will he do it today?"
- Czech: special clitics: weak personal and reflexive pronouns (mu, "him"), certain auxiliary verbs (by, "would"), and various short particles and adverbs (tu, "here"; ale, "though"). "Nepodařilo by se mi mu to dát" "I would not succeed in giving it to him". In addition there are various simple clitics including short prepositions.
- Swedish: Definite articles are attached to the end of the nouns (enclitic), like in the other Scandinavian languages. Examples: "en pojke" "a boy", "pojken" "the boy", "pojkarna" "the boys"; "en flicka" "a girl", "flickan" "the girl"; "ett barn" "a child", "barnet" "the child"
- In Old Norse, the definite article is expressed in the enclitic "-inn" eg. alfrinn "the elf" dvergrinn "the dwarf" and haukrinn "the hawk".
- Japanese: all particles, such as the genitive postposition の (no) and the topic marker は (wa).
- Korean: The copula 이다 (ida) and the adjectival 하다 (hada), as well as some nominal and verbal particles (e.g. 는, neun). However, alternative analysis suggests that the nominal particles do not function as clitics, but as phrasal affixes.
- Luganda: -nga attached to a verb to form the progressive; -wo 'in' (also attached to a verb)
See also
- Affix
- Clitic doubling
- Possessive case
- Separable affix
- Tmesis
- Weak form and strong form
- Weak pronoun
- Genitive case
References
enclitic in Afrikaans: Klitikum
enclitic in Breton: Stagadenn
enclitic in Czech: Příklonka
enclitic in German: Klitika
enclitic in Spanish: Clítico
enclitic in French: Clitique
enclitic in Friulian: Clitic
enclitic in Italian: Clitico
enclitic in Lithuanian: Proklitikai
enclitic in Dutch: Cliticum
enclitic in Japanese: 接語
enclitic in Norwegian Nynorsk: Klitikon
enclitic in Polish: Enklityka
enclitic in Portuguese: Clítico
enclitic in Romanian: Clitic
enclitic in Russian: Клитика
enclitic in Finnish: Liitepartikkeli
enclitic in Tagalog: Ingklitik
enclitic in Turkish: Klitik
enclitic in Chinese: 附著詞素