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viidatakse

Viidatakse is the present passive form of the Estonian verb viidata, meaning to cite, refer to, or point to. It is used to indicate that something is being mentioned or brought up by someone else, without naming the agent. In English, it corresponds to is cited or is referred to.

Grammar and usage: Viidatakse is a non-specific passive construction used when the subject performing the action

Examples: Typical translations into English illustrate its function. This claim is cited in previous studies. As

Etymology and usage note: The root viita is tied to pointing or indicating, which underpins the referential

is
unknown
or
unimportant.
It
is
common
in
academic
writing,
journalism,
and
reports
to
point
readers
to
sources
or
established
connections
without
attributing
the
statement
to
a
particular
agent.
The
related
noun
viide
means
reference,
and
the
verb
viitama
means
to
cite
or
to
refer
to.
The
past
passive
form
viidatud
means
cited
or
referred
to.
cited
in
the
sources,
this
fulfills
function
X.
In
Estonian,
similar
sentences
would
use
the
passive
construction
to
reference
sources
or
prior
statements
without
naming
the
author.
sense
of
viidata.
The
passive
form
viidatakse
signals
the
referential
function
in
a
text,
often
allowing
writers
to
attribute
information
to
sources
while
maintaining
a
neutral
or
formal
tone.
In
translations,
viidatakse
is
commonly
rendered
as
is
cited
or
is
referred
to,
preserving
the
sense
of
external
attribution
without
explicit
agency.