Lecture 1 Sentence Structure
1. What is grammar? Any systematic account of the structure of a language; the patterns that it describes; the branch of linguistics concerned with such patterns. Often restricted to relations among units that have meaning. Hence opp. Phonology. Eg. Singing is a grammatical unit, as are sing and – ing, while [s] or the syllable [si] are phonological. Also opposed, though again not always, to a dictionary or the lexicon. Eg. The meaning of sing belong to its entry in lexicon; the role of –ing to grammar, where it is described for verbs in general.
1.Basic Concepts1.1 Morphemes 1.2 Words 1.3 Phrases 1.4 Clauses 1.5 Sentences
2. More terms: Morpheme: a unit smaller than the word which has grammatical as opposed to lexical meaning. Free morphemes have a complete meaning and can stand by itself as a simple word. It can sometimes act as a complete utterance in connected speech. Eg: bed, tree, sing, dance.
Bound morphemes are those that have to be attached to other words. Bound morphemes are most affixes. AllomorphsThe same morpheme in different contexts may take different phonological or orthographical forms. the variants of the same morpheme are called―allomorphs‖. Eg: map--maps, dog--dogs, watch--watches, mouse—mice, ox—oxen, tooth— teeth.
TipsRoot, Stem & morpheme Polymorphemic words other than compounds may divide into roots and affixes. root– is the base form of a word which can not be further analyzed without any loss of identity. That is to say it is that part of word left when all the affixes are removed. affix– is the collective term for the type of formative that can be used only when added to another morpheme (the root or stem ). Naturally affixed belong to the type of bound morphemes.
stem– is any morpheme or combination of morphemes to which an affix can be added.
Ex: analyze the following words and show how many morphemes each of them contains: specialize, pretentious, unsympathetic, crudity, indisputable, individuality, halfhearted, bird’s-eye, gaslight, backburner, officer-in-charge, a man of letters, downfall, dining-room, power-drunk.
1.2 Words The word is composed of one or more than one morpheme. In terms of word-formation, it falls Into simple, derivative and compound words; Semantically, it can be divided into function and content word. 1.2.1 word-formation a) Affixation—Use the affixes to form new word. Affixes include prefix, suffix and infix. (see P4-5) prefix: para-, mini-, un-
suffix: -ise, -tion infix: foot/feet, goose/geese b) Composition—to form compound by combining two or more free morphemes.(see P 6)Ex: explain the meanings of the prefixes and suffixes in the following words: astir, awhir, deplane, disambiguate, ecocide, megajet, mini-budget, nonnovel, outsmart, supertax, anti-Marketeer cinerama, meritocrat, interviewee, racketeer, topsider, gangsterese, hawkish, narrowish, nuclearism, golfitis, beatnik, protestnik, dopester, huckster, weatherw
ise.
a--to convert a verb into an adjective, astir =stirring, awhir=whirring. anti--against, opposite to (opp. pro-) de--apart, from; dis--apart, away. eco--house, about or of ecology mega– large, million; mini—small non--not out– out, beyond super-above, over; -rama,-ama—panorama, large -crat– supporter, participant; meritocrat(英才, 天才,能人统治者) -ee—one that receives or benefits from a specified action; -eer,-er—one associated with,concerning with, or engage in
eg: face-saver(保全人家面子的一种妥协或措施), marathoner(马拉松运动员), second-guesser (事后诸葛亮),third-placer(第三名), preschooler(学龄前儿童), tryer-outer(试用的 新机器),Long Marcher(参加长征的人), topsider(最高权威者) -ese, -ish—of, relating to, characteristic of -ism—characteristic behavior or quality -itis—inflammation of disease of, indulgence in,excessive preoccupation with eg:bronchitis(支气管炎), arthritis(关节炎), golfitis(高尔夫球癖), jazzitis(爵士音乐癖), adjectivitis(喜欢用形容词成癖), interviewitis (采访癖), presidentitis(当总统癖,总统的派 头),theateritis(戏剧癖)
-nik—one associated with or characterized by -wise– in a specified manner, direction, or position
3. The noun phrase 1) The simplest kinds of clause usually consist of nouns and verbs. Helen saw Bill. N V N Noun phrases consist of one head noun, which must always be present, and a number of further elements, all which are optional. Noun phrases can therefore consist o only one, or very many, words. If only one word is prese it will usually be either a proper noun or a pronoun. 2) The majority of noun phrases consist of a head noun plus one or two of the optional elements. These optional elements fit into four predetermined slots in the noun phrase: NP= ( __ __ __ __) 1 2 3 4
1= determiner and /or enumerator ( eg. the, first, a, his) 2= pre-head modification (eg. red, washed, painting ) 3=head noun 4= post-head modification (eg. In Leeds, which I showed you) Eg. NP ( a Judas Priest T-shirt with vents cut out) NP ( My____friend_____ ) NP ( ___ ___ ___ Bill who lives in Leeds) NP ( ___ ___ Benny ___) NP ( ___ ___ He ___)
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