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yüklemini

Yüklemini is a hypothetical linguistic term used here to describe the full set of inflectional marks that realize a verb’s predicate in Turkish-like languages. The term is a neologism formed from yüklem, the Turkish word for predicate, with the suffix -ini chosen to resemble Turkish morphology; it is not widely used in published grammar. In this article, yüklemini is presented as a conceptual unit rather than a standard label for an established feature.

Definition and role. A yüklemini refers to the bundle of suffixal information attached to a verb stem

Usage and context. Because yüklemini is not an established term in standard reference works, its use appears

See also. Turkish grammar, yüklem (predicate), Turkish morphology, agglutinative languages. Notes: yüklemini is presented here as

that
encodes
tense,
aspect,
mood,
person,
number,
and
sometimes
evidential
or
modal
distinctions.
In
Turkic
and
related
languages,
many
of
these
grammatical
categories
are
expressed
through
a
sequence
of
affixes;
the
yüklemini,
as
defined
here,
encompasses
the
entire
affixal
payload
that
marks
the
predicate.
This
framing
is
intended
to
aid
theoretical
discussions
about
how
predicate
meaning
is
constructed
in
agglutinative
systems.
primarily
in
illustrative
or
experimental
discussions.
It
can
help
separate
the
discussion
of
the
verb’s
core
meaning
(the
stem)
from
the
complex
morphological
markings
that
specify
time,
agreement,
and
other
referential
features.
In
practice,
Turkish
grammar
typically
describes
these
features
through
conventional
labels
for
tense,
aspect,
mood,
person,
and
evidentiality
rather
than
a
single
umbrella
term
like
yüklemini.
a
theoretical
convenience
rather
than
a
widely
recognized
term.