In linguistics, gapping is a type of ellipsis that occurs in the non-initial conjuncts of coordinate structures. Gapping usually elides minimally a finite verb and further any non-finite verbs that are present. This material is "gapped" from the non-initial conjuncts of a coordinate structure. Gapping exists in many languages, but by no means in all of them, and gapping has been studied extensively and is therefore one of the more understood ellipsis mechanisms.Stripping is viewed as a particular manifestation of the gapping mechanism where just one remnant (instead of two or more) appears in the gapped/stripped conjunct.
Canonical examples of gapping have a true "gap", which means the elided material appears medially in the non-initial conjuncts, with a remnant to its left and a remnant to its right. The elided material of gapping in all the examples below is indicated with subscripts and a smaller font:
In the first sentence, the second conjunct has the subject others, the object rice, but the verb has been 'gapped', that is, omitted. Gapping can span several verbs and nonfinite clause boundaries, as in the second and third sentence illustrate, but it cannot apply across a finite clause boundary, as seen in the next sentence:
Me sigue una nube
Que baja y que sube
Me sigue una nube
Que baja, que sube y no de algod?n
Que cuando se aleja
Me da gran tristeza
Cuando se acerca
Pone rojos mis ojos de la emoci?n
Y cuando llego a mi casa
Ella va por la terraza
Y en el patio
Nos ponemos a jugar
Y cuando llego a mi casa
Ella va por la terraza
Y en el patio
Nos ponemos a jugar
Me sigue una nube
Que baja y que sube
Me sigue una nube
Que baja, que sube y no de algod?n
Que cuando se aleja
Me da gran tristeza
Cuando se acerca
Pone rojos mis ojos de la emoci?n
Y cuando llego a mi casa
Ella va por la terraza
Y en el patio
Nos ponemos a jugar
Y cuando llego a mi casa
Ella va por la terraza
Y en el patio