Home

coordinatively

Coordinatively is an adverb describing the manner in which elements in a sentence or clause are connected through coordination. It is formed from the adjective coordinating (coordinative) plus the suffix -ly. The term is most commonly used in linguistic descriptions of syntax.

In linguistics, coordination is the syntactic relation that joins two or more constituents of equal status,

Coordinatively distinct from subordination, where one element is dependent on another, coordination treats joined elements as

Usage notes: coordinatively is relatively rare in everyday English and is more commonly found in linguistic

See also: coordination (linguistics), conjunction, parallelism, gapping.

typically
using
coordinating
conjunctions
such
as
and,
or,
and
but,
or
by
punctuation.
Coordinatively
indicates
that
the
elements
are
linked
in
a
coordinated,
parallel
fashion
rather
than
in
a
hierarchical,
dependent
relationship.
For
example:
“The
two
teams
worked
coordinatively
to
complete
the
project,”
or
“The
sentence
contains
two
coordinated
clauses
joined
coordinatively
by
‘and’.”
Coordinative
structure
often
aims
for
symmetry
and
parallelism
in
form.
peers.
In
typology
and
practice,
languages
vary
in
how
strictly
they
require
explicit
coordinators,
how
they
handle
ellipsis
in
coordinated
sequences
(as
in
gapping),
and
how
coordination
interacts
with
word
order
and
morphology.
writing,
grammars,
or
theoretical
discussions.
In
ordinary
prose,
writers
are
more
likely
to
use
phrases
such
as
“in
coordination,”
“coordinated,”
or
“jointly.”
The
concept
remains
central
to
analyses
of
syntax,
parallel
structure,
and
sentence
rhythm.