Diturive
Diturive is a neologism in linguistics used to describe a pattern of discourse in which a speaker repeats or mirrors the main verb or predicate across adjacent clauses to reinforce cohesion. The construction typically involves ellipsis of the subject or auxiliary, with the second clause sharing the core action expressed in the first.
Origin and usage: The term diturive is a recently coined label rather than a widely attested phenomenon.
Characteristics: diturive constructions feature parallel structure, minimal lexical change between clauses, and either explicit repetition or
Examples: 1) The researchers tested the model, and the team did so again with a larger sample.
Relationship and evaluation: Diturive relates to ellipsis, pronoun reference, and parallelism. It is distinguished from simple