crossaffixes
Crossaffixes are a term used in linguistic morphology to describe affixes that encode information about another argument within the clause. An affix classified as a crossaffix attaches to a host word—usually a verb or a noun—and marks features that pertain to a different element of the sentence, such as the subject, object, or possessor. The relation is cross-referential rather than local to the host morpheme.
Crossaffixes can be realized as prefixes, suffixes, infixes, or clitic-like bound morphemes. They are especially common
Languages frequently cited in discussions of cross-reference morphology include Basque and Georgian, both of which exhibit
Crossaffixes overlap with broader concepts such as concord, agreement, and clitic clusters, and they illuminate how