Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.31724/rihjj.45.2.4
Relation and Substitution as the Basis for the Classification of Explicitly Subordinated Clauses
Branimir Belaj
orcid.org/0000-0002-2334-9673
; Filozofski fakultet Sveučilišta Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku
Abstract
Using the theoretical and methodological framework of cognitive grammar (Langacker 1987, 1991, 2008, 2009; Taylor 2002, Belaj i Tanacković Faletar 2014, 2017), this paper will discuss the classification of explicitly subordinate clauses. In cognitive grammar, like in most other grammatical theories, subordinate clauses are further subclassified into relative, completive and adverbial clauses. This classification, however, does not cover all types of explicit subordination and should be somewhat revised. This paper addresses explicit subordinate clauses as a continuum of constructions along the span from more schematic towards more specific ones, with the most schematic ones classified as either relative and non-relative clauses, for two specific reasons. First, the notion of relation is, without a doubt, the most important notion at all levels of grammatical description, and as such it is especially suited to be the basic criterion for different classifications and subdivisions (e.g. of parts of speech), including the classification of subordinate clauses in which a conjunction, in addition to the linking function, also has the substitutive function, which allows the subordinate clause to develop different meanings inherent to other types (almost all adverbial and completive clauses). On the one hand, this type of classification covers all types of subordination, and on the other, it is aligned to the general cognitive linguistic approach to categorization and supports the overlaps that exist between different types of clauses.
Keywords
explicite subordinatio; relative clauses; non-relative clauses; correlative clauses; adverbial clauses; completive clauses
Hrčak ID:
229763
URI
Publication date:
13.12.2019.
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