Grammatical Hierarchy
Grammatical Hierarchy
PHONEME
Greenbaum, chapter 5
CLAUSE
(additional info can also be found in Greenbaum, 13.1 and chapter 14)
Greenbaum, Chapter 2
SENTENCE
TEXT
PHRASES
A phrase is a grammatical unit which may consist of just one word (its head) or its head and
expressions (including other phrases) that modify or complement it. (Delahunty and Garvey,
2010.
- Phrases behave as syntactical units (subject, verb, object, complement, adverbial). Phrases
can consist of either a single word or a unified group of words.
- A single word may be a phrase when it is the head1 of that phrase.
1
“The head of a phrase is the phrase’s central element; any other words (or phrases) in the phrase orient to it,
either by modifying it or complementing it. The head determines the phrase’s grammatical category: if the head
is a noun, the phrase is a noun phrase; if the head is a verb, the phrase is a verb phrase, and so on. The head
can also determine the internal grammar of the phrase: if the head is a noun, then it may be modified by an
article; if the head is a transitive verb, it must be complemented by a direct object.” – Delahunty and Garvey,
2010.
- Phrases can be identified by substitution and movement tests. If an expression can be
replaced by a pronoun (that process is called pronominalization), or it can be moved from one part of
a sentence to another without any internal reorganization, then that expression is a phrase.
- Phrases can be embedded (one phrase can be part of the structure of another phrase).
- The head of a phrase may be modified or complemented by other words or phrases.
“A film”
“Those successful films”
“The successful Hollywood films”
“Some successful Hollywood films about love”
“Some really successful Hollywood films about love”
“The details that are available” Relative clause: post modifier
“went” simple VP
“could have written” Complex VP
“must have been writing”
“may have been fixed”
“have written”
“have been writing”
“are talking”
“was learning”
“don’t bother”
Points to consider:
When the verb phrase has only one element (the verb, head) is a SIMPLE verb phrase.
When the verb phrase has more than one element (auxiliary/ies + head) is a COMPLEX verb
phrase.
The first element of a complex VP functions as the operator.
In the examples above “could”, “must” and may” are modal auxiliary verbs (form) that function
as operators (function).
The verbs “to be”, “have” and “do” are primary auxiliary verbs. They can function as both
auxiliary and main verbs (see Biber, 5.2.2 – page 104)
Lexical verbs: verbs that function only as main verbs. They cannot be auxiliary verbs. For
example: “promise”, “forget”, “hate”, “remember”, “ think”, “run”, etc.
Prepositional Phrase
“by accident”
Head NP
Prep. C.
Prepositional Phrase
CLAUSE Grammatical unit that functions as one part of speech and that includes a subject and a
verb (Subject + Predicate).
Classification of clauses:
o Independent or main clause: It is a type of clause which contains a subject and a verb. It
expresses a complete meaningful thought. This clause can stand alone as a complete
sentence. This type of a clause can also join other independent clauses or dependent clauses
to make a compound sentence using coordinators such as and, but, or, etc. In other words,
independent clauses are grammatically complete statements.
o Dependent or subordinate clause: As the name suggests, a clause which cannot stand
alone as a complete meaningful sentence is called the dependent clause. This clause also has
a subject and a verb but does not express a complete thought. The thought or idea expressed
by a dependent clause is unfinished. The dependent clause must be joined using subordinates
with another clause to make a meaningful sentence. Let’s take a look at some example of
dependent clause. The dependent clauses are underlined.
For example:
- If that’s a corn sandwich, I’m having it.
- They went for a walk while the sun was still out.
- I am not cleaning the dishes unless Parker helps.
- When she was dating Peter, she had an accident.
o Finite A finite clause includes a primary verb — a verb that can be inflected for tense,
person and sometimes number — and includes a subject
o Non-finite contain a verb which does not show tense
o Nominal clauses
o Relative clauses
o Adverbial clauses
o Comparative clauses
PRACTICE:
Exercise 1: After reading the previous examples, analyse the following phrases.
Define the type of phrase and describe their elements (their form and function).