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Bibliography



                             •   R. Huddleston, G.K. Pullum,
        A student’s Introduction to English Grammar, CUP 2005


•   R. Huddleston, G.K. Pullum, The Cambridge grammar of the English language, CUP 2002
•   Noel Burton Roberts, Analyzing sentences. An introduction to English syntax,
    Pearson, 2010
•   E. Finegan, Language, its structure and use, Wadsworth, Cengage Lear1989
•   G. Yule, The Study of language, CUP 1991
Seminar topics
1.    Basic concepts in grammar, the parts of speech
2.    Verbs, tense, aspect, and mood
3.    Clause structure, complements, and adjuncts
4.    Nouns and noun phrases
5.    Adjectives, adverbs, prepositions and preposition phrases
6.    Negation and related phenomena
7.    Clause type: asking, exclaiming, and directing
8.    Subordination and content clauses
9.    Relative clauses
10.   Grade and comparison
11.   Non-finite clauses and clauses without verbs
12.   Coordination, information packaging in the clause
13.   Passive Voice
14.   Morphology : morphological processes
Basic concepts in grammar, the parts of speech

                        5 October 2012

• Number of people who speak English all over the world.

• Widely spread language

• Language varieties/dialects

• Dialects and styles
Dialects

• Language varieties/dialects
• Standard English-the central dialect
• Other dialects, non-standard (regional, local, social)
Examples:
I did it myself.                  I done it myself.
I haven’t told anybody anything. I ain’t told anybody nothing.

• Differences in pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar
• Grammar more stable and uniform than accent and
  vocabulary
• What does grammar deal with? Form of sentences and
  smaller units: clauses, phrases and words.
Styles
• Formal and informal styles, formal contexts vs casual
  conversations.

               He was the one with whom she worked.
                  He was the one she worked with.


• Informal style is not restricted to speech, common in mass
  media, printed books on academic subjects.
  Informal sentences are not non-standard.
What is the difference between
a style and a dialect?
Switching between styles within your
native dialect is easy.



Switching between dialects is not.
Descriptive and prescriptive
             approaches to grammar
• Descriptive grammar books describe the grammatical system
  people use when they speak and write.
  Show what the language is.

• Prescriptive grammar books tell people how they should speak and
  write, give advice.
  Show how to avoid mistakes.

Some grammar manuals do not make distinction between standard vs
non-standard dialects, formal vs informal styles. They apply the term
incorrect to both non-standard dialect and informal style. Is it fair?

•   Do not mix non-standard or informal with incorrect.
More grammatical terms
To talk about a language we need some
standard terms dealing with3 different areas
within the study of a language:
1. Syntax
2. Morphology
3. Semantics

    1 &2 concern the form of sentences or words
Syntax
• Study of the principles governing how words
  can be put together to form sentences.
Ex.
I found an un opened bottle of wine. (admissible)
I found a bottle unopened of wine. (not admissible)

Some customers complained a lot about the product .
Some customers about the product complained a lot .
Morphology
Deals with the internal form of words.
Examples:
• unopened: un + open + ed
                         • inhabited
                       • inadequately
                        • preoccupied
                      • dysfunctional
                         • illogicality
                      • unwillingness
                      • unwellcoming
Semantics
• is about meaning
• principles by which words/sentences are
  associated with their literal meanings.
Examples:
unopened is the opposite of opened
More examples of grammatical terms
• subject/object
• noun, noun phrases, verb, adjective, adverb
  pronoun
• tenses
• passive/active voice
• imperative
• clauses
Misleading definitions of grammatical terms
Definition of the Past Tense:
„The Past Tense expresses or indicates a time that is in the past.”

Grammatical category vs semantic property



Definition works                                            Definition fails
• The seminar started one                                   • I thought the seminar
  hour ago.                                                   started next week.
                                                                                         Past tense but not past time.



• If he said that, he was                                   • If he said that, she wouldn’t
  wrong.                                                      believe him.
                                                                                       Past tense but not past time.


• I offended my friends.
                                                            • I regret offending my
                                                              friends.
                                                              Not every past time reference involves a past tense.
Imperative
      A book definition: A form or instruction used to issue a command.
                         Is it a satisfactory definition?

•   Command                             •   Shut up!
•   Offer                               •   Have a drink.
•   Request                             •   Please pass the salt.
•   Invitation                          •   Come to dinner.
•   Advice                              •   Have a close look at it.
•   Instruction                         •   To see the picture click
                                            here.
Instead of the term command we can use directive

• I direct you to pass me the salt
• I direct you to click here, to come to dinner.
                           Go to bed.      Sleep well.
Both are imperatives .
Go to bed is a directive

Sleep well is not. I’m not directing you to sleep well. I’m wishing you a

peaceful night.
          Please pass me the salt.           Could you pass me the salt?
Both sentences are directives but Could you pass me the salt? is not imperative.
It’s a question=interrogative.
Directives can be issued in other ways, not by the use of imperatives.
???????????

• Imperatives
• Declaratives
• Interrogatives

What’s the main difference between imperatives and declaratives in English?

                           I am happy.    Be happy.
                            I help you.   Help me.

Subjects are obligatory in declaratives and omitted in imperatives.
How do words combine to form
        sentences in Standard English?
Regularities, rules, technical terms.
2 kinds of sentences:
• clausual sentence ( a single clause)
• compound sentence (coordinated clauses, joined by a coordinator)
Ex.:
She is a teacher. He is a doctor. I am a student.
She is a teacher, he is a doctor and I am a student.

I like coffee. He likes tea.
I like coffee but he likes tea.


The idea of a clause is more basic than the idea of a sentence.
More technical terms

• subject (Subj) & predicate (Pred)
• Noun phrase (NP), Verb phrase (VP)
Ex.:
 Subj Pred      Subj Pred             Subj      Pred
Things change. Mark studied.         Students complained.

All things change. Mark studied yesterday.   Some students complained about it.
 NP                            VP                  NP              VP

NP: things, Mark, students, all things, some students

Phrase= head + 0 or more dependents

NP = a noun with or without dependents
Subj + Pred

• Subj =actor       Pred=action
Semantics vs syntax
               Subject usually has the form of an NP.
               Its default position is before the verb.
Ex.:
    Basic clause                                  Interrogative
The seminar has finished.                   Has the seminar finished?
Mark is here.                               Is Mark here?
The students complained.                    Did the students complain?

Rule: the subject proceeds the verb in the basic version and follows it in the interrogative.
Words, Lexemes, Inflection
Ex.:
My students have many books and a computer programme; one book deals with
the programme.

programme & programme.             books & book
books & book are different words but forms of the same lexeme.

Different inflectional forms of the same lexeme, plural and singular.
Book and books are inflectional forms of the lexeme book.

Ex.:
drive, drives, drove, driving, driven
fast, faster, fastest

Lexeme – a minimal unit (as a word or stem)
The parts of speech, 8 categories
Category       Example                  Example               Example
noun           The students worked      That is Mark.         We saw him.
verb           The students worked.     It is clear.          I have a headache.
adjective      He’s smart.              It looks easy.        I’ve got a new exam.
determinative The students worked.      He needs some         All exams change.
                                        books.
adverb         The lecturer spoke       She’s not very old.   I almost died.
               clearly.
preposition    It’s in my schedule.     I gave my notes to    Here’s a list of them.
                                        him.
coordinator    I got up and left.       Mark or Alice took It’s difficult but
                                        it.                interesting.
subordinator   It’s suprising that my   I wonder whether      I don’t know if
               students were late.      it’s true.            you’re telling the
                                                              truth.
Noun (N), (n)
Nouns:
•   37% of the words in almost any text.
•   Physical objects, inanimate objects, abstract nouns
•   Noun categories in traditional grammar: common nouns (book, man), proper
    nouns (Alice, Europe), pronouns (I, you, his, them)
•   Inflectional forms: singular, plural
•   Nouns function as head in NP.; have a function of a subject in a clause.
Verbs (V), (v)
Verbs:
• In clauses verbs point at:
a) an action: I made a cake.
b) some other event: The seminar started.
c) a state: Students know Standard English.
• Auxilary verbs: do, does, did, have, has, will, am,
  is, are
• Lexical verbs
• Verbs are head in VPs, predicate in a clause
• Inflectional contrast of tense between past and
  present: -ed, -s, -ing.
Adjective (Adj)
1. Express properties of people or things; with the verb be describe
states.
         The long seminar.        Students are happy.


2. Two adjective functions:
  ATTRIBUTIVE               PREDICATIVE ( after be, become, feel, seem etc.)
The long seminar                   The seminar is long.
An angry student                   He became angry.

3. Adjectives are gradable. The degree is indicated by:
• modifiers like - fairly big, suprisingly good, extremely polite, very cold
• inflectional system, comparison- 3 grades: plain, comparative, superlative.
                  old, older, oldest
Adverbs (Adv)
1. Most are derived from adjectives by adding – ly.
2. Other common adverbs: almost, always, not, often, quite,
   rather, soon, too, very
3. Adverbs are modifiers of verbs (or VPs), adjectives, adverbs.


     Modififes a v or VP   She spoke clearly.   I often teach them.
     Modifies an adj.      a remakably long     It’s very long.
                           seminar
     Modifies an adv.      She spoke quite      It’ll end quite soon.
                           clearly.
DETERMINATIVES (D)

• a, an, the, ; definite, indefinite
• this, that, these, those, some, any, many, few,
  one, two, three, etc
Prepositions (Prep)
• Prepositions express relations of space or time.

across the street, at the corner,, under the bridge,
after classes, before Christmas


• Prepositions depend on nouns, verbs/VPs, adjectives.

      Dependent on         I sat by the door.   I met him after
      a verb/VP                                 classes.

      Dependent on         the student in the   the day before that
      a noun               room
      Dependent on         keen on grammar      superior to others
      an adjective
Coordinators & subordinators
                  (Co) & (Sub)

• Coordinators (and, or, but)
My students need good books and more time.
My students need good books.           My students need more time.
Coordinators serve to mark coordination between 2 or more expressions of
equal syntactic status.


• Subordinators (that, whether,if)
The seminar is difficult.   I realise that the seminar is dififficult.
           main clause                              subordinate clause
Complements (object, predicative complement), modifiers
                            The structure of phrases (VP, NP)
NP: She regularly gives us very useful advice on grammar.
advice-head, on grammar-complement, very useful-modifier
VP: He kept her letters for years.;
kept-head,       her letters-complement, for years-modifier
• The structure of VP
Subtypes of complement: object & predicative complement
Predicative complements occur with a limited number of verbs: be, feel, seem.

         Object                             Predicative complement
         I met a friend of yours.           She was a friend of yours.
         She appointed a real idiot.        I felt a real idiot.
         very friendly (AdjP) can’t be an   They seemed very friendly.
         object
Canonical and Non-canonical clauses

Canonical clauses (syntactically the   Non-canonical clauses
most basic or elementary clauses)      (more complex syntactically)


•   Positive: It is easy.              • Negative: It isn’t easy.
•   Declarative: I can do it.          • Interrogative: Can I do it?
•   Declarative: I am patient.         • Imperative: Be patient.
•   Main: You’re great.                • Subordinate: I know that you’re great.
•   Non-coordinate:                    • Coordinate:
    That’s Anna.     I’m blind.          That’s Anna or I’m blind.
• Active: I finished the seminar.      • Passive: The seminar is finished.

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Students 1 wyk ad 5.10.12

  • 1. Bibliography • R. Huddleston, G.K. Pullum, A student’s Introduction to English Grammar, CUP 2005 • R. Huddleston, G.K. Pullum, The Cambridge grammar of the English language, CUP 2002 • Noel Burton Roberts, Analyzing sentences. An introduction to English syntax, Pearson, 2010 • E. Finegan, Language, its structure and use, Wadsworth, Cengage Lear1989 • G. Yule, The Study of language, CUP 1991
  • 2. Seminar topics 1. Basic concepts in grammar, the parts of speech 2. Verbs, tense, aspect, and mood 3. Clause structure, complements, and adjuncts 4. Nouns and noun phrases 5. Adjectives, adverbs, prepositions and preposition phrases 6. Negation and related phenomena 7. Clause type: asking, exclaiming, and directing 8. Subordination and content clauses 9. Relative clauses 10. Grade and comparison 11. Non-finite clauses and clauses without verbs 12. Coordination, information packaging in the clause 13. Passive Voice 14. Morphology : morphological processes
  • 3. Basic concepts in grammar, the parts of speech 5 October 2012 • Number of people who speak English all over the world. • Widely spread language • Language varieties/dialects • Dialects and styles
  • 4. Dialects • Language varieties/dialects • Standard English-the central dialect • Other dialects, non-standard (regional, local, social) Examples: I did it myself. I done it myself. I haven’t told anybody anything. I ain’t told anybody nothing. • Differences in pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar • Grammar more stable and uniform than accent and vocabulary • What does grammar deal with? Form of sentences and smaller units: clauses, phrases and words.
  • 5. Styles • Formal and informal styles, formal contexts vs casual conversations. He was the one with whom she worked. He was the one she worked with. • Informal style is not restricted to speech, common in mass media, printed books on academic subjects. Informal sentences are not non-standard.
  • 6. What is the difference between a style and a dialect?
  • 7. Switching between styles within your native dialect is easy. Switching between dialects is not.
  • 8. Descriptive and prescriptive approaches to grammar • Descriptive grammar books describe the grammatical system people use when they speak and write. Show what the language is. • Prescriptive grammar books tell people how they should speak and write, give advice. Show how to avoid mistakes. Some grammar manuals do not make distinction between standard vs non-standard dialects, formal vs informal styles. They apply the term incorrect to both non-standard dialect and informal style. Is it fair? • Do not mix non-standard or informal with incorrect.
  • 9. More grammatical terms To talk about a language we need some standard terms dealing with3 different areas within the study of a language: 1. Syntax 2. Morphology 3. Semantics 1 &2 concern the form of sentences or words
  • 10. Syntax • Study of the principles governing how words can be put together to form sentences. Ex. I found an un opened bottle of wine. (admissible) I found a bottle unopened of wine. (not admissible) Some customers complained a lot about the product . Some customers about the product complained a lot .
  • 11. Morphology Deals with the internal form of words. Examples: • unopened: un + open + ed • inhabited • inadequately • preoccupied • dysfunctional • illogicality • unwillingness • unwellcoming
  • 12. Semantics • is about meaning • principles by which words/sentences are associated with their literal meanings. Examples: unopened is the opposite of opened
  • 13. More examples of grammatical terms • subject/object • noun, noun phrases, verb, adjective, adverb pronoun • tenses • passive/active voice • imperative • clauses
  • 14. Misleading definitions of grammatical terms Definition of the Past Tense: „The Past Tense expresses or indicates a time that is in the past.” Grammatical category vs semantic property Definition works Definition fails • The seminar started one • I thought the seminar hour ago. started next week. Past tense but not past time. • If he said that, he was • If he said that, she wouldn’t wrong. believe him. Past tense but not past time. • I offended my friends. • I regret offending my friends. Not every past time reference involves a past tense.
  • 15. Imperative A book definition: A form or instruction used to issue a command. Is it a satisfactory definition? • Command • Shut up! • Offer • Have a drink. • Request • Please pass the salt. • Invitation • Come to dinner. • Advice • Have a close look at it. • Instruction • To see the picture click here.
  • 16. Instead of the term command we can use directive • I direct you to pass me the salt • I direct you to click here, to come to dinner. Go to bed. Sleep well. Both are imperatives . Go to bed is a directive Sleep well is not. I’m not directing you to sleep well. I’m wishing you a peaceful night. Please pass me the salt. Could you pass me the salt? Both sentences are directives but Could you pass me the salt? is not imperative. It’s a question=interrogative. Directives can be issued in other ways, not by the use of imperatives.
  • 17. ??????????? • Imperatives • Declaratives • Interrogatives What’s the main difference between imperatives and declaratives in English? I am happy. Be happy. I help you. Help me. Subjects are obligatory in declaratives and omitted in imperatives.
  • 18. How do words combine to form sentences in Standard English? Regularities, rules, technical terms. 2 kinds of sentences: • clausual sentence ( a single clause) • compound sentence (coordinated clauses, joined by a coordinator) Ex.: She is a teacher. He is a doctor. I am a student. She is a teacher, he is a doctor and I am a student. I like coffee. He likes tea. I like coffee but he likes tea. The idea of a clause is more basic than the idea of a sentence.
  • 19. More technical terms • subject (Subj) & predicate (Pred) • Noun phrase (NP), Verb phrase (VP) Ex.: Subj Pred Subj Pred Subj Pred Things change. Mark studied. Students complained. All things change. Mark studied yesterday. Some students complained about it. NP VP NP VP NP: things, Mark, students, all things, some students Phrase= head + 0 or more dependents NP = a noun with or without dependents
  • 20. Subj + Pred • Subj =actor Pred=action Semantics vs syntax Subject usually has the form of an NP. Its default position is before the verb. Ex.: Basic clause Interrogative The seminar has finished. Has the seminar finished? Mark is here. Is Mark here? The students complained. Did the students complain? Rule: the subject proceeds the verb in the basic version and follows it in the interrogative.
  • 21. Words, Lexemes, Inflection Ex.: My students have many books and a computer programme; one book deals with the programme. programme & programme. books & book books & book are different words but forms of the same lexeme. Different inflectional forms of the same lexeme, plural and singular. Book and books are inflectional forms of the lexeme book. Ex.: drive, drives, drove, driving, driven fast, faster, fastest Lexeme – a minimal unit (as a word or stem)
  • 22. The parts of speech, 8 categories Category Example Example Example noun The students worked That is Mark. We saw him. verb The students worked. It is clear. I have a headache. adjective He’s smart. It looks easy. I’ve got a new exam. determinative The students worked. He needs some All exams change. books. adverb The lecturer spoke She’s not very old. I almost died. clearly. preposition It’s in my schedule. I gave my notes to Here’s a list of them. him. coordinator I got up and left. Mark or Alice took It’s difficult but it. interesting. subordinator It’s suprising that my I wonder whether I don’t know if students were late. it’s true. you’re telling the truth.
  • 23. Noun (N), (n) Nouns: • 37% of the words in almost any text. • Physical objects, inanimate objects, abstract nouns • Noun categories in traditional grammar: common nouns (book, man), proper nouns (Alice, Europe), pronouns (I, you, his, them) • Inflectional forms: singular, plural • Nouns function as head in NP.; have a function of a subject in a clause.
  • 24. Verbs (V), (v) Verbs: • In clauses verbs point at: a) an action: I made a cake. b) some other event: The seminar started. c) a state: Students know Standard English. • Auxilary verbs: do, does, did, have, has, will, am, is, are • Lexical verbs • Verbs are head in VPs, predicate in a clause • Inflectional contrast of tense between past and present: -ed, -s, -ing.
  • 25. Adjective (Adj) 1. Express properties of people or things; with the verb be describe states. The long seminar. Students are happy. 2. Two adjective functions: ATTRIBUTIVE PREDICATIVE ( after be, become, feel, seem etc.) The long seminar The seminar is long. An angry student He became angry. 3. Adjectives are gradable. The degree is indicated by: • modifiers like - fairly big, suprisingly good, extremely polite, very cold • inflectional system, comparison- 3 grades: plain, comparative, superlative. old, older, oldest
  • 26. Adverbs (Adv) 1. Most are derived from adjectives by adding – ly. 2. Other common adverbs: almost, always, not, often, quite, rather, soon, too, very 3. Adverbs are modifiers of verbs (or VPs), adjectives, adverbs. Modififes a v or VP She spoke clearly. I often teach them. Modifies an adj. a remakably long It’s very long. seminar Modifies an adv. She spoke quite It’ll end quite soon. clearly.
  • 27. DETERMINATIVES (D) • a, an, the, ; definite, indefinite • this, that, these, those, some, any, many, few, one, two, three, etc
  • 28. Prepositions (Prep) • Prepositions express relations of space or time. across the street, at the corner,, under the bridge, after classes, before Christmas • Prepositions depend on nouns, verbs/VPs, adjectives. Dependent on I sat by the door. I met him after a verb/VP classes. Dependent on the student in the the day before that a noun room Dependent on keen on grammar superior to others an adjective
  • 29. Coordinators & subordinators (Co) & (Sub) • Coordinators (and, or, but) My students need good books and more time. My students need good books. My students need more time. Coordinators serve to mark coordination between 2 or more expressions of equal syntactic status. • Subordinators (that, whether,if) The seminar is difficult. I realise that the seminar is dififficult. main clause subordinate clause
  • 30. Complements (object, predicative complement), modifiers The structure of phrases (VP, NP) NP: She regularly gives us very useful advice on grammar. advice-head, on grammar-complement, very useful-modifier VP: He kept her letters for years.; kept-head, her letters-complement, for years-modifier • The structure of VP Subtypes of complement: object & predicative complement Predicative complements occur with a limited number of verbs: be, feel, seem. Object Predicative complement I met a friend of yours. She was a friend of yours. She appointed a real idiot. I felt a real idiot. very friendly (AdjP) can’t be an They seemed very friendly. object
  • 31. Canonical and Non-canonical clauses Canonical clauses (syntactically the Non-canonical clauses most basic or elementary clauses) (more complex syntactically) • Positive: It is easy. • Negative: It isn’t easy. • Declarative: I can do it. • Interrogative: Can I do it? • Declarative: I am patient. • Imperative: Be patient. • Main: You’re great. • Subordinate: I know that you’re great. • Non-coordinate: • Coordinate: That’s Anna. I’m blind. That’s Anna or I’m blind. • Active: I finished the seminar. • Passive: The seminar is finished.