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relativer

Relativer is a term used in linguistics as a neutral label for linguistic elements that encode relativity between parts of a sentence. In this sense, a Relativer includes relative pronouns, relative adverbs, and other markers that introduce relative clauses and relate them to an antecedent noun or noun phrase. The concept helps describe how different languages connect a dependent clause to the noun it modifies.

Origin and scope: The term derives from Latin relativus and the broader idea of relativity in syntax.

Functional description: A Relativer connects a dependent clause to its antecedent, providing additional information about that

Cross-linguistic variation: Some languages require overt relativizers; others use zero relativization. Some employ resumptive pronouns or

Examples: English: The student who passed the exam. German: Der Mann, der im Park steht. Japanese: 私が読んだ本

See also: Relative clause, Relative pronoun, Relativizer, Relational grammar.

It
is
employed
mainly
in
typology
and
theoretical
syntax
to
discuss
function
rather
than
to
name
a
fixed
item
in
a
particular
language.
As
such,
the
Relativer
category
is
a
descriptive
tool
rather
than
a
prescriptive
grammar
label.
antecedent.
Mechanisms
vary:
in
English,
a
relative
pronoun
such
as
who,
which,
or
that;
in
German,
der,
die,
das
and
related
forms;
in
other
languages,
alternative
strategies
may
be
used
to
mark
the
relation
between
clause
and
noun.
different
syntactic
strategies,
such
as
prenominal
relative
clauses
or
postnominal
attachments.
The
diversity
of
approaches
reflects
differences
in
word
order,
morphology,
and
information
structure.
(watashi
ga
yonda
hon)
translates
as
“the
book
I
read,”
illustrating
a
prenominal
relative
clause
in
some
analyses.