perclause
Perclause is a term used in some linguistic annotation schemes to denote a single clause within a sentence, treated as an independent unit for analysis. It is commonly defined as the minimal syntactic unit that carries a predicate together with its core arguments, with optional modifiers. In this sense, a perclause corresponds to the clause-level building block used for downstream analyses such as parsing and semantics.
A perclause typically includes a finite predicate and its primary arguments, such as subject and object, along
In practice, sentences with multiple clauses are segmented into perclauses for uniform analysis. This segmentation positions
Applications of perclause annotation include corpus linguistics, statistical parsing evaluation, machine translation training, and readability or
Example: In the sentence “The cat slept, and the dog barked,” there are two perclauses: “The cat