4.1 What Are Word Classes Every Day Definitions
4.1 What Are Word Classes Every Day Definitions
4.1 What Are Word Classes Every Day Definitions
These definitions are not adequate for serious investigation for several
reasons:
1. They appeal superficially to one part of meaning: the kind of things that
a given word denotes.
2. These definitions are not inclusive. i.e. doesn’t include all class members.
3. They ignore where a given word is placed in a clause or a phrase.
Nouns can be preceded by the, a, this but verbs cannot.
Adjectives can precede nouns or follow verbs.
New books – is new –seemed new.
That is, we know words by ‘the company they keep’ and, thus, we group
them into classes called word classes.
1. Lexical words include nouns (e.g. villa, baby, idea), verbs (e.g. buy,
destroy, think), adjectives (e.g. wooden, strong, abstract) and adverbs
(e.g. rapidly, hopefully).
2. Grammatical word are the definite and indefinite articles the and a, the
demonstrative adjectives this, these, that and those and the auxiliary
verbs is, has and so on (as in is reading a book, has read this book)
The term ‘auxiliary’ reflects the fact that these verbs do not refer to
actions or states but ‘help’ main verbs such as read to build a
construction.
Verbs like may, could and must and prepositions such as with, from and
by are considered grammatical words but such words seem to be on the
borderline between content and form.
- The telegram example
Arriving Tuesday 5pm instead of We are arriving on Tuesday at 5pm
But………..
(genitive case) أعطى عمر العظم للكلب – أعطى عمر العظم للكلبين
Look at the examples from Russian in the book p.44. Can you think of examples
from Arabic?
In traditional terms nouns are inflected for case and number while verbs
are inflected for tense, person and number.
In some languages like Arabic, adjectives too are inflected for case and
number تحية للطالب المجدين. جاء الطالب المجدون.جاء الطالب المجد
Adverbs and prepositions are typically not inflected
English does not have the rich system of inflections like Russian and Arabic but
….
The syntactic criteria for word classes are based on what words a given
word occurs with and the types of phrases in which a given word occurs.
This is the most important criteria type in English due to its relative
poverty of morpho-syntactic criteria.
In spite of their importance, the application of these criteria is not
straightforward. Consider the following examples
a. The dog stole the turkey
b. The children chased the dog
c. The cook saved no scraps for the dog.
Major criteria
All nouns meet the criteria of occurring to the left of a verb in an active,
declarative transitive clauses
All nouns meet the criteria of occurring to the right of a verb but
preceded by a preposition
Minor criteria
Not all nouns combine with an article *the Ethel
Not all nouns allow a plural suffix *Ethels
Therefore, noun classes are split into subclasses when dealing with
minor criteria and thus we have central and peripheral members of a
class.
a. A tall building
b. This building is tall
c. A very tall building
- Regarding the comparative form, adjectives are split into two subclasses
one takes the suffix er (tall-taller), the other takes more (beautiful-more
beautiful)
- Some adjectives meet all the criteria above and thus considered central
or prototypical members of the class.
- Others do not meet all the criteria above and thus considered peripheral
members.
a. A unique building A woolen cloak
b. This building is unique This cloak is woolen
c. A very unique building * A very woolen cloak
d. * a uniquer building * A woolener cloak
* a more unique building * A more woolen cloak
The fact that the major formal criteria for prototypical nouns apply to words
such as property and anger is what justifies the latter being classes as nouns