Phrases - Clauses - Sentences
Phrases - Clauses - Sentences
INTRODUCTION
Word and sentence are two basic units to grammar, though they are by no
mean the only units of grammatical structure, and there is no direct relation
between words and sentences. Neither are they the smallest and largest units of
grammar respectively: there are recognizable units smaller than words, and units
larger than sentences. However, sentences do exhibit a structure that a larger unit,
i.e. paragraph or discourse, does.
Words do not pattern directly into sentences. This implies that there are
some intervening levels of organization between word and sentence.
Consider the following sentence: the grand old man of letters stumbled
along the dimly lit road, but the pen which he had lost had been picked up by a
small boy. This sentence cannot be viewed simply as a concatenation of words: the
+ grand + old + man+ etc. Some groups of words belong more closely together
than any of them do with any others, and these longer stretches of group words in
turn form larger units. In this sentence, we can recognize the following word
groupings: the grand old man of letters, along the dimly lit road, the pen which he
had lost, had been picked up, stumbled, by a small boy. These are called phrases.
They combine in turn into larger units: the grand old man of letters stumbled along
the dimly lit road, the pen which he had lost had been picked up by a small boy.
These are called clauses. And then they are linked together by BUT to form a
complete sentence.
Thus, words pattern into phrases, phrases into clauses and clauses into
sentences. Or from the alternative perspective, a sentence is composed of one or
more clauses, a clause is composed of one or more phrases and a phrase is
composed of one or more words. Our investigation of grammar will, then, be
concerned with the kinds of words, phrases, clauses and sentences that occur in
contemporary English, and with the rules for their structure and combination.
(Jackson, pp3-4)
PHRASES
Classes of phrase:
We shall recognize five classes of phrase: NOUN PHRASE (NP),
ADJECTIVE PHRASE (ADJ.P), ADVERB PHRASE (ADV.P),
PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE (P.P) and VERB PHRASE (VP). Of these, noun
phrase (NP), adjective phrase (adj.p), adverb phrase (adv.p) all have the same basic
structure:
[Premodifier(s)] + HEAD + [Postmodifier(s)]
II.2. Function:
In the clause, PPs act as adverbials (A):
E.g. We have been living here for 10 years.
The children go to school every day.
The adverbial PPs have various meanings. In the following sentence the
three PPs are adverbials of time-when, means, and place, answering the questions
When? How? and Where?
E.g. By Monday we had arrived by trainin New York.
In NPs, Adj.Ps, Adv.Ps and PPs, subordinate PPs act as postmodifiers.
E.g. the girl in the room
afraid of spiders
too quickly for comfort
on the top of the bookshelf
III.1.2. Function:
In the clause, Adj.Ps function as complement (C):
E.g. This coffee is hot.
Adolphus drinks his coffee hot.
In the phrase, Adj.Ps can function as premodifiers in NPs:
E.g. a very large slice of bread
the most boring book
shook 1
might shake 2
had shaken 3
was shaking 4
was shaken 5
might have shaken 6
might be shaking 7
The might be shaken 8
branch
had been shaking 9
had been shaken 10
was being shaken 11
might have been shaking 12
might have been shaken 13
might be being shaken 14
had been being shaken 15
might have been being shaken 16
V. SUMMARY
The following, then are the formal structures of the five types of phrase
A. Noun phrases (NP): {Mn} H {Mn}.
Where H (head) may be: N, pronoun, Adj., etc.; M before H (premodifiers) may
be: det., Adj., N, etc.; M after H (postmodifiers) may be: PP, NP, Adv.P, Adj.P,
relative clause, etc.
B. Prepositional phrases (PP):p{Mn } H {Mn }
Where P is a preposition, and M, H, and M are exactly as in noun phrases.
C. Adjective phrases (Adj.P): {Mn } H {Mn }
Where H (head) is an Adjective; M before H (premodifiers) are normally Adv.;
M after H (postmodifiers) are PP, Adv, and some clauses.
D. Adverb phrases (Adv.P): {Mn } H {Mn }
Where H (head) is an Adv, and M are Adv.Ps.
E. Verb phrases (VP):{Aux} {Aux} {Aux} {Aux} Mv
Where all Aux are v (operator - verbs), and Mv is either v (operator - verb) or V
(full - verb).
The functions of these phrase classes in the clause can be summarized as
shown in the following figure. The arrow X ----- Y is to be interpreted: X may be a
Y.
S V O C A
Subject verb Object Complement Adverbial
VP NP Adj.P Adv.P PP