etconstructions
Etconstructions is a term used in linguistics to describe a family of syntactic patterns that encode coordination and aggregation using forms historically derived from the Latin conjunction et, meaning "and." The concept covers how two or more units—nouns, adjectives, verbs, or clauses—are joined to express joint action, shared property, or cumulative meaning. Though rooted in Latin and Romance studies, etconstructions are applied in cross-linguistic typology to compare coordination strategies across languages.
The defining feature of etconstructions is the use of coordinated elements linked by et, or by forms
Historically, etconstructions originate in Latin prose and poetry, where et joined nouns, adjectives, and verbs. They
In contemporary linguistics, etconstructions are studied for insights into coordination, information structure, and typology. They have
See also: conjunction, coordination, parallelism, calque, historical linguistics.