An anaphor is a pronoun that refers to some other entity in the discourse, and a reciprocal anaphor is one that refers to each of the members of that entity. From Wordnik.com. [None is, none are: Grammar according to Clarkson « Motivated Grammar] Reference
In effect, one can take a temporal anaphor as standing proxy for a when-clause and a modal anaphor like. From Wordnik.com. [Descriptions] Reference
So to help the reader out, Yanni actually restarts the question with an anaphor replacing the giant noun phrase. From Wordnik.com. [Yanni illustrates an important point about grammar « Motivated Grammar] Reference
The part on reciprocal anaphors (“anaphor”: highlighted while typing as misspelled!) sealed the deal for me. From Wordnik.com. [None is, none are: Grammar according to Clarkson « Motivated Grammar] Reference
For example, ˜he™ appears to be used as an unbound anaphor in discourse (3) and ˜she™ seems to be so used in. From Wordnik.com. [Again] Reference
In both cases, we will find interpretative dependencies reminiscent of the dependency relation between an anaphor and its antecedent, and we will describe, if only in outline, how basic DRT has been extended so as to explain the similarities. From Wordnik.com. [Discourse Representation Theory] Reference
You can’t use a reciprocal anaphor unless its referent can be thought of as a plural set. From Wordnik.com. [None is, none are: Grammar according to Clarkson « Motivated Grammar] Reference
If you’ll excuse a bit of linguistic terminology, (3b) shows that none can take the reciprocal anaphor each other. From Wordnik.com. [None is, none are: Grammar according to Clarkson « Motivated Grammar] Reference
(You’d use myself, a reflexive anaphor, instead.) None can be thought as a plural set, but not one apparently can’t. From Wordnik.com. [None is, none are: Grammar according to Clarkson « Motivated Grammar] Reference
How to solve an anaphor?. From Wordnik.com. [BeanRocket Blog Communities Lastest Posts] Reference
436) ” i.e., an anaphor. From Wordnik.com. [Names] Reference
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