pseudoreflexive

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English[edit]

Examples (Spanish grammar)
  • El se enojó ("he got angry", literally, "he angered himself")

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From pseudo- +‎ reflexive.

Adjective[edit]

pseudoreflexive (not comparable)

  1. (grammar) Of a verb: requiring the use of a reflexive construction when no reflexive action is actually taking place.
    • 1987, Bernard Comrie, editor, The World's Major Languages, New York, N.Y., Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, published 1990, →ISBN, page 228:
      Another strategy when the object is not human, used less than in Italian or Spanish but nevertheless not uncommon, is the pseudo-reflexive structure, that is, the use of the active forms of a verb reflexive in appearance in a 'passive' sense (les fleurs se vendent ici le dimanche lit. 'flowers sell themselves . . .' i.e. 'flowers are sold here on Sundays').
  2. (mathematics) Inducing a topological isomorphism between the domain and its image.
    • 2001, José N. Aguayo, Thomas E. Gilsdorf, “Non-Archimedean Vector Measures and Integral Operators”, in A. K. Katsaras, W. H. Schikhof, L. Van Hamme, editors, p-adic Functional Analysis: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference (Lecture Notes in Pure and Applied Mathematics), New York, NY: Marcel Dekker, Inc., →ISBN, page 8:
      In the next two theorems we will assume E pseudoreflexive. This is not a big restriction since every Banach space over a spherically complete nonarchimedean field is pseudoreflexive.

Derived terms[edit]