anaphoricity

English

Etymology

anaphoric + -ity

Noun

anaphoricity (uncountable)

  1. The property of being anaphoric.
    • 1978, Ellen Kaisse, “On the Notion 'Complete Anaphoric' in Phonology”, in The Annual Proceedings of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, page 341:
      I am not sure if Hankamer is right in claiming this property for it, but the allied concepts of unstressability and complete anaphoricity certainly are of use in distinguishing relative from interrogative pronouns, particularly undeclined relatives like pu which carry no information about the number, gender, or case of the NP they replace.
    • 2016, Greg Durrett, Taylor Berg-Kirkpatrick, Dan Klein, “Learning-Based Single-Document Summarization with Compression and Anaphoricity Constraints”, in arXiv:
      We present a discriminative model for single-document summarization that integrally combines compression and anaphoricity constraints.
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