cc: coordination
A cc is the relation between a conjunct and the coordinating conjunction that precedes it. The governor of the conjunction if the first conjunct in the paradigm.
Lukas yra aukštas ir lieknas . \n Luke is tall and thin .
cc(lieknas, ir)
cc(thin, and)
Turime obuolių , kriaušių ir bananų . \n We-have apples , pears and bananas .
cc(bananų, ir)
cc(bananas, and)
A conjunction may also appear at the beginning of a sentence. This is also called a cc, and dependent on the root predicate of the sentence.
Ir tada jis išėjo . \n And then he left .
cc(išėjo, Ir)
cc(left, And)
Paired conjunctions
Paired conjunctions occur when the same conjunction is repeated before each component: ir…ir, ar…ar, nei…nei, etc. (and…and, or…or, neither….nor, etc.). They depend on the component they connect and are annotated as cc.
Ir laiptus , ir turėklus darbuotojai sutvarkė . \n The-employees fixed both the-stairs and the-handrails .
cc(laiptus, Ir)
cc(turėklus, ir)
cc(the-stairs, both)
cc(the-handrails, and)
Nei knygų , nei vadovėlių bibliotekoje neradau . \n I-didn’t-find neither books nor textbooks in-the-library .
cc(knygų, Nei)
cc(vadovėlių, nei)
cc(books, neither)
cc(textbooks, nor)
Compound sentences
The relation cc is used to mark coordinating conjunctions such as and, but, so etc. in complex sentences.
Aš einu į kiną , o jis skuba į darbą . \n I go to the-cinema , and he hurries to work .
cc(skuba, o)
cc(hurries, and)
For more on coordination, see the conj relation.
cc in other languages: [bej] [bg] [bm] [cop] [cs] [de] [el] [en] [es] [et] [eu] [fi] [fr] [fro] [ga] [gsw] [hy] [it] [ja] [ka] [kk] [ky] [lt] [naq] [no] [pcm] [pt] [qpm] [ro] [ru] [sl] [ssp] [sv] [swl] [tr] [u] [vi] [xcl] [yue] [zh]