Haspelmath 2020

Haspelmath, Martin. 2020. On the difference between a clause and a sentence. In VAProsy jazykoznanija: Megasbornik nanostatej, edited by A.A. Kibrik, Ks.P. Semënova, D.V. Sičinava, S.G. Tatevosov, A.Ju. Urmančieva, 597–605. Moskva: Buki Vedi. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.4705136.

https://zenodo.org/record/4705136

@incollection{haspelmath_difference_2020,
  address   = {Moskva},
  author    = {Haspelmath, Martin},
  booktitle = {VAProsy jazykoznanija: Megasbornik nanostatej, edited by A.A. Kibrik, Ks.P. Semënova, D.V. Sičinava, S.G. Tatevosov, A.Ju. Urmančieva},
  pages     = {597–605},
  publisher = {Buki Vedi},
  title     = {On the difference between a clause and a sentence},
  url       = {https://zenodo.org/record/4705136},
  year      = {2020},
  abstract  = {This paper proposes the following definitions of commonly used terms: – clause: A clause is a combination of a predicate (full verb or nonverbal predicate) and its arguments, plus modifiers. – sentence: A sentence is a maximal clause, i.e. a clause that is not part of another clause. – complex clause (= “complex sentence”): A complex clause is a clause that contains at least one other clause – subordinate (= embedded) clause: A subordinate/embedded clause is a clause that is an argument (“complement clause”), and adnominal modi- fier (“relative clause”), or an adverbial modifier (“adverbial clause”) (but see Haspelmath 1995). – matrix clause (of subordinate clause S): The matrix clause of subordinate clause S is the minimal clause that contains it. – matrix-clause fragment: A matrix-clause fragment is the part of a matrix clause that is not the subordinate clause. – main clause: A main clause is a clause that is not a subordinate clause.},
  doi       = {10.5281/zenodo.4705136},
  file      = {Zenodo Full Text PDF:/Users/martin/Zotero/storage/3ZGQTGQG/Haspelmath - 2020 - On the difference between a clause and a sentence.pdf:application/pdf},
  urldate   = {2021-09-20}
}