Grammar
Grammar
Grammar
The grammatical structure of language comprises two major parts – morphology and syntax. The
two areas are obviously interdependent and together they constitute the study of grammar.
Syntax, on the other hand, deals with the way words are combined. It is concerned with the
external functions of words and their relationship to other words within the linearly ordered units
– word-groups, sentences and texts. Syntax studies the way in which the units and their meanings
are combined. It also deals with peculiarities of syntactic units, their behavior in different
contexts.
Syntactic units may be analyzed from different points of view, and accordingly, different
syntactic theories exist.
It should be noted that (3) differs from (4) because the former admits no passive transformation.
Transformational method proves useful for analysing sentences from the point of their deep
structure:
Flying planes can be dangerous.
This sentence is ambiguous, two senses can be distinguished: a) the action of flying planes can
be dangerous, b) the planes that fly can be dangerous. Therefore it can be reduced to the
following kernels:
Communicative Syntax. It is primarily concerned with the analysis of utterances from the point
of their communicative value and informative structure. It deals with the actual division of the
utterance – the theme and rheme analysis. Both the theme and the rheme constitute the
informative structure of utterances. The theme is something that is known already while the
rheme represents some new information. Depending on the contextual informative value any
sentence element can act as the theme or the rheme:
Who is at home? - John is at home. Where is John? – John is at home.
Pragmatic approach to the study of syntactic units can briefly be described as the study of the
way language is used in particular contexts to achieve particular goals. Speech Act Theory was
first introduced by John Austin. The notion of a speech act presupposes that an utterance can be
said with different intentions or purposes and therefore can influence the speaker and situation in
different ways:
Of special interest here is the problem of indirect speech acts: Are you leaving already? In our
everyday activities we use indirect speech acts rather willingly because it is the best way to
influence people, to get what we want and to be polite at the same time.
Textlinguistics studies the text as a syntactic unit, its main features and peculiarities, different
ways of its analysis.
Discourse analysis focuses on the study of language use with reference to the social and
psychological factors that influence communication.
The syntactic language level can be described with the help of special linguistic terms and
notions: syntactic unit, syntactic form, syntactic meaning, syntactic function, syntactic position,
and syntactic relations.
Syntactic unit is always a combination that has at least two constituents. The basic syntactic
units are a word-group, a clause, a sentence, and a text. Their main features are:
a) they are hierarchical units – the units of a lower level serve the building material for the units
of a higher level;
c) they are of communicative and non-communicative nature – word-groups and clauses are of
non-communicative nature while sentences and texts are of communicative nature.
Syntactic meaning is the way in which separate word meanings are combined to produce
meaningful word-groups and sentences.
Green ideas sleep furiously. This sentence is quite correct grammatically. However it makes no
sense as it lacks syntactic meaning.
Syntactic form may be described as the distributional formula of the unit (pattern). John hits the
ball – N1 + V + N2.
Syntactic function is the function of a unit on the basis of which it is included to a larger unit: in
the word-group a smart student the word ‘smart’ is in subordinate attributive relations to the
head element. In traditional terms it is used to denote syntactic function of a unit within the
sentence (subject, predicate, etc.).
Syntactic position is the position of an element. The order of constituents in syntactic units is of
principal importance in analytical languages. The syntactic position of an element may determine
its relationship with the other elements of the same unit: his broad back, a back district, to go
back, to back sm.
Syntactic relations are syntagmatic relations observed between syntactic units. They can be of
three types – coordination, subordination and predication.
1. Syntactic relations.