Assignment Syntax: Name: Melisa NPM: 201912500363 Class: Y4C
Assignment Syntax: Name: Melisa NPM: 201912500363 Class: Y4C
Assignment Syntax: Name: Melisa NPM: 201912500363 Class: Y4C
Npm : 201912500363
Class : Y4C
Assignment Syntax
Page 21-22
1. The following sentences exemplify the criteria of transposition,
substitution, coordination and ellipsis applied to one type of phrase.
What type of phrase is it and which criteria apply to which examples?
1. I put the letter into the top drawer of the bureau.
Transposition : into the top drawer of the bureau
2. I put the letter there.
Substitution : there
3. Where I put the letter was into the top drawer of the bureau?
Transposition : into the top drawer of the bureau
4. Into the top drawer of the bureau I put the letter.
Transposition : into the top drawer of the bureau
5. It was into the top drawer of the bureau that I put the letter.
Transposition : into the top drawer of the bureau
6. I put the letter either there or into the top drawer of the bureau.
Coordination : or
7. I put into the top drawer of the bureau the letter, my wallet and an old
watch.
Transposition : in the top drawer of the bureau.
2. Analyse the following examples into phrases. Label each phrase, for example
as noun phrase, adverbial phrase and so on, as appropriate. If in doubt about
whether words that are next to each other in an example constitute a phrase,
apply the tests as demonstrated in Exercise 1 above.
For example, in (1) they can be substituted for the pedestrians offended by the
dangerously selfish action of the driver; him can be replaced by the selfish
driver; into the harbour can be replace by off, and so on. The sequence into the
harbour occurs in the different construction Into the harbour they threatened to
throw him. That is, the tests of substitution and transposition indicate that into
the harbour is a phrase, a single constituent.
1. The pedestrians offended by the dangerously selfish action of the
driver threatened to throw him into the harbour.
The pedestrians offended by the dangerously selfish action of the driver:
Noun Phrase
offended by the dangerously selfish action of the driver: Participle
Phrase (offended is a Participle)
by the dangerously selfish action of the driver: Prepositional Phrase
the dangerously selfish action of the driver: Noun Phrase
dangerously selfish: Adjective Phrase
of the driver: Prepositional Phrase
the driver: Noun Phrase
threatened to throw him into the harbour: Verb Phrase
to throw him into the harbour: Infinitive Phrase
him: Noun Phrase
into the harbour: Prepositional Phrase
the harbour: Noun Phrase