- •The Subject Matter of Grammar
- •The Evolution of English Grammars
- •The XX th Century Linguistic Schools
- •Prague Linguistic School (Functional Linguistics)
- •American Descriptive Linguistics
- •Transformational and Transformational Generative Grammar
- •Semantic Syntax
- •Methods of Linguistic Analysis
- •Parsing (Traditional Syntactic Analysis)
- •The Oppositional Method
- •The Distributional method
- •The ic Method (method of immediate constituents)
- •The Transformational Method
- •The Method of Deep and Surface Structures
- •The Functional Sentence Perspective Method (fsp)
- •The Componential Method
- •The Contextual Method
- •The Levels of Language
- •The Morphological Structure of me
- •The Classifications of Morphemes
- •Paradigmatics and Syntagmatics
- •The Asymmetry of a Linguistic Sign
- •Parts of Speech Classifications of Parts of Speech.
- •Notionals and Functionals
- •Heterogeneity
- •Field and Periphery
- •Subcategorization
- •Onomaseological approach
- •The Noun The General Properties of a Noun
- •The Category of Gender.
- •The Category of Number
- •The Category of Case
- •Debated Problems within the Category of Case
- •Genitive Constructions (n’s n)
- •The Article Debated Problems
- •The Functions of Articles in a Sentence
- •The Verb The General Properties of a Verb
- •The Category of Tense
- •Classifications of Tenses
- •The Future Tense
- •The Present Tense
- •The Past Tense
- •The Future-in-the-Past Tense
- •The Category of Aspect
- •The Category of Time Relation (or Correlation)
- •The Category of Voice
- •The Category of Mood
- •The Indicative Mood
- •The Imperative Mood
- •The Subjunctive Mood
- •Points of Similarities with the Finites
- •Points of Differences with the Finites
- •Debated Problems within The Verbals
- •The Functions of Non-Finites
- •Types of Syntax
- •The theory of the phrase
- •Devices of Connecting Words in a Phrase
- •Debated Problems within the Theory of the Phrase
- •Classifications of Phrases
- •The theory of the simple sentence
- •The Definition of a Sentence
- •Syntactic Modelling of the Sentence
- •Semantic Modelling of the Sentence
- •The Notion of a Syntactic Paradigm
- •Structural Classification of Simple Sentences
- •Predicative Constructions Within a simple sentence we distinguish primary and secondary (independent/ dependent) elements, the structural nucleus and its adjuncts.
- •Syntactic Processes
- •The Principal Parts of a Simple Sentence
- •The Secondary Parts of a Simple Sentence
- •An Object
- •An Adverbial Modifier
- •An Attribute
- •Debated Problems within a Simple Sentence
- •A composite sentence
- •A Compound Sentence
- •I. The General Notion of a Complex Sentence.
- •2. The Status of the Subordinate Clause.
- •3.1. Classifications of Subordinate Clauses.
- •3.2. Types of Subordinate Clauses.
- •4. Connections between the Principal and the Subordinate Clause.
- •5. Neutralization between Subordination and Coordination.
- •6. The Character of the Subordinating Conjunction
- •7. Levels of Subordination
- •Syntactic Processes in the Complex Sentence.
- •9. Communicative Dynamism within a Composite Sentence( Compound and Complex) and a Supra-phrasal Unit.
The Componential Method
It a logico-linguistic method of decomposing the semantic content of a word or a grammatical form into the smallest units of sense (semantic components, semantic markers, semes, or SCs). It was advanced by Generative Semantics to describe the content sphere of language.
A semantic component is the smallest indivisible unit of sense comparable to elementary particles in physics. The content of the word “bachelor” can be described in terms of such semantic components as a human being, a male, maturity, in a state of being unmarried. The content of the verb “to giggle” can be described in such semes as an action, a female, young, a concrete emotional reaction associated with young females.
The Componential analysis is not quite adequate by itself and should be superimposed upon other methods, Superimposing it upon the Transformational method and the contextual analysis we can distinguish the following semantic varieties of the genitive case:1. Possessive Genitive (Mary’s hat => (Mary has a hat); 2.Subjective Genitive (Napoleon’s victory => Napoleon is a victor); 3. Objective Genitive ( Napoleon’s defeat => Somebody has won a victory over Napoleon; 4. Genitive of Destination (The women’s magazine => The magazine is for women; 5. Ambiguous Genitive (It can be interpreted as a Subjective or an Objective Genitive (A mother’s love), etc.
The Contextual Method
This method is associated with the names of professors V.V. Vinogradov, I.V. Arnold, I.R. Galperin, N. Amosova, N.A. Шехтман, Palmer, M. Halliday.
A context is an immediate environment of a linguistic unit, which actualizes, semantizes, desemantizes, hypersemantizes or disambiguates it. Actualization can come from an immediate context or from a distant context.
Scholars distinguish different types of context: extralinguistic (situational) and linguistic contexts, the latter being subdivided according to their structure into phrasal, sentential, supraphrasal, the context of discourse; according to the character of constituents into lexical, lexico-semantic, lexico-grammatical; according their length into macrocontext and microcontext.
Making use of the contextual analysis, we are to take into consideration semantic agreement / disagreement of semantic components between the semantic structures of the words combined, or the semantic content of a word and that of its form. Semantic agreement / disagreement is based on logical agreement / disagreement. Semantic agreement / disagreement expresses itself in the presence or absence of similar semantic components in the contents of the words or forms combined or juxtaposed.
None of the methods, taken isolatedly, is sufficient to produce an adequate linguistic analysis. All the methods covered complement each other. Only a synthesis of them can result in a reliable analysis of linguistic units.
The Levels of Language
Language is a structure, a hierarchy of levels. Each level has a basic unit. The lowest is the phonemic (phonological) level. Its basic unit is a phoneme. It is the smallest meaningless distinctive unit. Phonemes, constituting morphemes, differentiate them (ship – sheep: [i]:: [i:] ). A morpheme is the basic unit of the morphemic (morphological) unit. A morpheme is the smallest meaningful unit. The classifications and combinations of morphemes are studied by morphology. Next comes the lexemic level. Its basic unit is a lexeme, the smallest meaningful unit on this level. Lexemes realize themselves in words, which constitute phrases (a beautiful girl, to run quickly, very fast). A phrase is the basic unit of the phrasemic level. A phrase is a non-predicative unit, made up of words. Next comes the syntaxemic level, the basic unit of the level is a syntaxeme. A syntaxeme is a monopredicative unit. Syntaxemes realize themselves in sentences. Sentences, constituted by words and phrases, are united into composite sentences (compound and complex), which are polypredicative units. Sentences, monopredicative and polypredicative, are united into supra-phrasal units. A supra-phrasal unit is the basic unit of the supra-phrasal level. Sentences of various structure and supra-phrasal units constitute texts. The basic unit of the textual level, which is the highest level of language structure, is a texteme.
This hierarchy of linguistic units can be shown in the following way. A problem is a word. A complex problem is a phrase (a word combination). It is a complex problem is a simple sentence. It is a complex problem and it can’t be sold is a compound sentence. It is a complex problem which can’t be sold is a complex sentence. It is a complex problem. It can’t be sold by outdated techniques is a supra-phrasal unit.
There is no impassable borderline between language levels. One and the same unit can refer to several levels. Teach is a lexical morpheme and a word. In It is a trial- and –error procedure the element underlined is a phrase and a word (an attribute). In a do-good judge the element underlined is a sentence and a word (an attribute).