phraseoberste
Phraseoberste is a neologism in linguistics used to describe the highest-rank phrase within a clause—the element that carries the principal information or focus of a sentence in a given context. It functions as a heuristic rather than a formal grammatical category, helping analysts discuss how speakers highlight what matters most and how listeners interpret the utterance. The phraseoberste is not tied to a single syntax or language; its identification can depend on discourse context, prosody, and pragmatic intent, and it may interact with other framing devices such as topic position or emphasis.
Etymology and usage: The term combines "phrase" with the German oberste, meaning topmost. It emerged in contemporary
- "Yesterday I met your sister." If the discourse context foregrounds time, "Yesterday" may be treated as
- "I want a new car, not an old one." The phrase "a new car" can be analyzed
- "The report, not the presentation, is due today." Here "The report" functions as the phraseoberste signaling
Notes: Because the term is not universally adopted, readers should treat it as a heuristic for discussion
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