English edit

Etymology edit

auto- +‎ reflexive

Adjective edit

autoreflexive (comparative more autoreflexive, superlative most autoreflexive)

  1. Occurring in such a way that the agent performing an action is inherently utilized.
    • 1999, Roland Greene, Unrequited Conquests: Love and Empire in the Colonial Americas, page 13:
      One might describe what happens between Columbus's first letter and the postconquest narratives of Francisco López de Gómara or Bernal Díaz del Castillo as the European imposition of meanings onto American society — rendering allegorical what was encountered as autoreflexive — and the consequent loss of the indigenous perspectives that might challenge that construction of the New World.
    • 2017, Hannah Sarvasy, A Grammar of Nungon: A Papuan Language of Northeast New Guinea, page 161:
      The personal pronouns combine with postposition =gon and the two enclitics =nang 'alone' and =wuk 'by strength of' in autoreflexive expressions (more at §7.1.2). These can in some cases be interpreted as oblique verbal arguments rathre than adverbial phrases []

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit