Syntax: Though), and Interjections (Oh, Phew) - Modern Linguists, Though Accept
Syntax: Though), and Interjections (Oh, Phew) - Modern Linguists, Though Accept
Find five less known onomatopoeic words and ask your friends to
guess their meanings.
SYNTAX
23
[The diligent students] [have completed] [the last task].
A phrase may consist of one word or a group of words. The substi-
tution test may be used to show the identity of a phrase, i.e. a single
word can often replace it. For example, the phrase the diligent students
can be replaced by the pronoun they. Another way to test the reality of
phrases is the movement test – a whole phrase can be moved as a unit.
Compare the two sentences:
a) He put the cake on the kitchen table.
b) On the kitchen table, he put the cake.
The main types of phrases are: the noun phrase, the verb phrase, the
adjective phrase, the adverb phrase, and the prepositional phrase. Each
type of phrase has the head – the lexical category around which the
phrase is built. A phrase can contain only the head. Some examples of
noun phrases: a book, the book, people, these people, the red carpet.
Prepositional phrases consist of a preposition and a noun phrase: on the
table, with a spoon, in the crowded street, etc.
According to Noam Chomsky’s generative grammar, a finite set of
formal rules project a finite set of sentences upon the potentially infinite
number of sentences of a language. To put it more simply, there are a
certain number of formal rules which explain the structure of the sen-
tences in a language. One of the main rules states that a sentence con-
sists of a noun phrase and a verb phrase. The hierarchical structure of a
sentence can be represented by tree structures, i.e. diagrams showing the
hierarchical organization of phrases. On the whole, the analysis of sen-
tence structure proceeds along a number of different lines, depending on
the linguistic school and model of analysis.
Sentences are classified into different types. The majority of lin-
guists make a distinction between functional and formal classifications.
From the point of view of their function, sentences are divided into
statements (She closed the window.), questions (Did she close the win-
dow?), commands (Close the window!), and exclamations (What a big
window!). The formal classification makes a distinction between de-
clarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamative sentences. One
more categorization of sentences is into simple, complex and compound.
Simple sentences have one Subject – Verb unit, e.g. The cat jumped on
the couch. A compound sentence consists of two or more main clauses,
e.g. He is a busy man, but he promised to help me with this problem. We
have a complex sentence when one clause is used as a main clause and
another is added to express subordinate meaning, developing some as-
24
pect of the main clause, e.g. When I first saw the building, I was amazed
by its size.
Exercise 1
Mark the grammatical sentences in each set. Determine why the other
sentences are not grammatical.
Exercise 2
Determine what part of speech each word in the given sentences repre-
sents.
Exercise 3
Draw a tree structure for each phrase and determine the type of phrase.
1) the book
25
2) a new book
3) very intelligent
4) on the shelf
5) with the new binoculars
6) so stupid
7) ideas
8) the brilliant ideas
Exercise 4 (Advanced)
Exercise 5
26