Structure of Modification
Structure of Modification
It is composed by Head and Modifier. This structure may enlarge, choose, change, or
even describe the Head. Both the Head and Modifier are not always single words.
They may be structures with more or less complexities.
Noun as Head
Noun very frequently can be found as Head of Structure of Modification. There are
five parts of speech, including noun it self, that can modify the noun.
Adjective as Noun Modifier
Adjective precedes the noun (Head) constantly except if the adjective is not a single
word but structure.
E.g.
Modifier
Head
Fried
chicken
A great
calamity
Head
A figure
A house
Possessive
Noun
Kids
play
A weeks
holiday
The womans
friend
Noun-Adjunct
Noun
Bus
station
That woman
doctor
Noun adjunct is noun that has a function like an adjective (to modify noun). It is
always in a singular form, not plural form.
E.g.
Noun as Noun Modifier can be from appositive words. The position still keeps
preceding the Head. Appositive form never follows the Head.
E.g.
Noun
Appositive
My Uncle
Zakki
The disease
influenza
The River
Gangga
Verb
Noun
Running
water
Baked
potatoes
Noun
Water
Verb
running in the street
Potatoes
baked slowly
Money
to buy
The man
to see
Since verbs in (-ing), Nouns in (-ing), and Adjective in (-ing) can all modify nouns
and all appear in the position between noun determiners and noun, ambiguity is a
strong possibility to such cases.
E.g.
Pleasing in the example (1) is an adjective because a qualifier like very can
precede it, and the phrase means a table that is pleasing. Rotting in the example
(2) is a verb because it cannot be preceded by a qualifier very while it also does
not have a meaning a table for rotting. Dining in the example (3) is noun because
it has a meaning a table for dining
Adverb as Noun Modifier
Adverb is rarely functioned as noun modifier. The position is always directly after
noun (Head).
E.g.
Head
Modifier
The temperature
inside
Heavens
above
The conversations
afterwards
The questions
below
Simple Prepositions
After
Compound
Across From
As
Along with
Against
along side of
Phrasal Prepositions
In regard to
By means of
Object of preposition usually is a noun. Sometimes it also cam be pronoun, or
structure of modification with noun as the Head.
E.g.
Verb as Head
After verb
He works successfully
He drives rapidly
He is moving ahead
He was looking sidewise
Between Auxiliary-Verb
He stepped inside
Since particular adverb can also modify the noun, it is often be ambiguous.
E.g.
Children have nowadays many kinds of toys
In this sentence, the word nowadays can modify the word children, or it may
modify the word have.
Noun as Verb Modifier
Several particular nouns can be verb modifier. The position is after verb and this
noun has a noun determiner because noun after verb also can be an object of verb.
If the noun can be changed by it or them, the noun must be an object not modifier.
E.g.
Structure of Modification
Structure of Complementation
He saw a mile
He measured a mile
As modifier
He works to succeed
As Object
He wants to succeed
He loves to live
He studies to succeed
Adjective as Head
Adjective that habitually modify noun or verb also become the Head of structure of
modification.
Qualifier as Adjective Modifier
The word that is mostly used as modifier of Adjective is Qualifier such as very,
rather, pretty, etc.
E.g. She is very pretty
(cloth)
hard to say
boiling hot
good to see
dark blue
deathly pale
Adverb as Head
There are four class words that can modify the adverb
Qualifiers as Adverb Modifier
E.g.
very easily
rather slowly
happily enough
E.g.
far away
sometimes below
a meter away
some way up
Adverb that follows the prepositional phrases becomes the modifier of prepositional
phrases, while adverb that precedes the prepositional phrases becomes the
modifier of the preposition only.
http://linguasphereus.blogspot.com/2011/04/structure-of-modification.html