conj: conjunct
A conjunct is the relation between two elements connected by a coordinating conjunction, such as ir (and), o, bet (but) or a comma or other punctuation. We treat coordination asymmetrically. The head of the relation is the first conjunct and all the other conjuncts depend on it via the conj relation.
Jis mėgo dainuoti ir groti . \n He liked to-sing and play .
conj(dainuoti, groti)
conj(to-sing, play)
Lukas yra atviras, geras ir nuoširdus . \n Lukas is open, kind and sincere .
conj(atviras, geras)
conj(atviras, nuoširdus)
conj(open, kind)
conj(open, sincere)
Coordinate clauses are treated the same way as coordination of other constituent types:
Aš geriu arbatą , o jis skaito knygą . \n I am-drinking tea , and she is-reading a-book .
conj(geriu, skaito)
conj(am-drinking, is-reading)
Linking words (ir taip toliau, ir panašiai / and so on, and so forth) and abbreviations (ir t. t., ir pan. / etc.) are tagged cc (ir and ADV (taip, toliau, panašiai, t. t., pan. / and, so on, and so forth, etc.), because their main element is an adverb; yet they are still attached as conj to the head of the coordination:
Lukas turi žemuogių , aviečių , mėlynių ir taip toliau . \n Lukas has strawberries , raspberries , blueberries , and so on .
conj(žemuogių, toliau)
advmod(toliau, taip)
conj(strawberries, on)
advmod(on, so)
Prie jūros galima valgyti ledus , degintis , skaityti knygą ir t. t. \n At the-seaside you-can eat ice-cream, sunbathe, read a-book, and so on.
conj(valgyti, t.-2 )
advmod(t.-2 , t.-1 )
conj(eat, on-1)
advmod(on, so-1)
In Lithuanian “so on” is an abbreviation.
For more on the relation between a conjunct and the coordinating conjunction, see the cc relation.
conj in other languages: [axm] [bg] [bm] [cop] [cs] [de] [el] [en] [es] [et] [eu] [fi] [fo] [fr] [fro] [ga] [gsw] [hbo] [hy] [it] [ka] [kk] [ky] [lt] [naq] [nci] [nmf] [no] [oge] [pcm] [pt] [qpm] [ro] [ru] [sl] [ssp] [sv] [swl] [tr] [u] [vi] [xcl] [yue] [zh]