{{Short description|Grammatical word pairing}}{{Unreferenced|date=October 2025}}
In grammar, a '''correlative''' is a word that is paired with another word with which it functions to perform a single function but from which it is separated in the sentence.
In English, examples of correlative pairs are ''both–and, either–or, neither–nor, the–the'' ("<u>the</u> more <u>the</u> better"), ''so–that'' ("it ate <u>so</u> much food <u>that</u> it burst"), and ''if–then.''
In the Romance languages, the demonstrative pro-forms function as correlatives with the relative pro-forms, as ''autant–que'' in French; in English, demonstratives are not used in such constructions, which depend on the relative only: "I saw <u>what</u> you did", rather than *"I saw <u>that</u>, <u>what</u> you did".
==See also== *Correlative conjunction *Pro-form (namely section Table of correlatives)
==External links== *{{wti}}
Category:Parts of speech
{{grammar-stub}}