释义 |
en·clit·ic I. \(ˈ)en|klid.]ik, inˈk-, -lit], ]ēk also (ˈ)eŋ|- or iŋˈ-\ adjective Etymology: Late Latin encliticus, from Greek enklitikos, from enklinein to cause to incline, pronounce as an enclitic, from en in + klinein to lean — more at in, lean 1. : leaning or dependent with reference to accent: a. of a word or particle in Greek or Latin grammar : being without independent accent and being attached in pronunciation to a preceding word in which it may cause certain accentual changes (as Greek te in anthrōpoi te, Latin -ne in videsne) b. of a word or particle in the grammar of languages other than Greek and Latin : treated in pronunciation as forming a part of the preceding word (as English thee in prithee and not in cannot) — compare proclitic 2. : inclined — used of the relation of the planes of the fetal head to those of the maternal pelvis; compare synclitic II. noun (-s) : an enclitic word or particle |