noun
- the grammatical arrangement of clauses or phrases in a subordinate relationship, typically using conjunctions like ‘because,’ ‘although,’ or ‘when’
Usage: linguistics; grammar
Examples
- The sentence ‘I stayed home because it was raining’ demonstrates hypotaxis.
- Hypotaxis creates complex sentences with dependent clauses.
- Academic writing often employs hypotaxis to show logical relationships.
- The conjunction ‘although’ introduces hypotaxis in this sentence.
- Students learn to identify hypotaxis when studying sentence structure.
- Hypotaxis differs from parataxis in its use of subordinating elements.