subclause

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English

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Etymology

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From sub- +‎ clause.

Noun

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subclause (plural subclauses)

  1. (grammar) A subordinate clause.
  2. A subsidiary clause in a legal contract etc.

Verb

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subclause (third-person singular simple present subclauses, present participle subclausing, simple past and past participle subclaused)

  1. (transitive) To qualify with a subclause.
    • 1970, Yale/Theatre, volumes 3-4, page 86:
      Too many serious reviews are subclaused, hyperbolic conscious, egotistical and self-indulgent, not to mention boring.
    • 2002, New Scientist, volume 176, numbers 2367-2375, page 57:
      In a light dry style, free from academic subclausing, the ever-acute Smith gets right into the minutiae of these communities - who is growing what and why - and how it affects the neighbours.
    • 2016, Adam Fletcher, How to be German - Part 2: in 50 new steps:
      However, in their execution, they can be too exacting, too demanding, creating a practicality monster that rampages through German society in its high-visibility jacket, measuring, judging, clausing, subclausing, contracting, securing, []