Advanced Grammar 2
Advanced Grammar 2
Assignments
Weekly reflections 3 Assignments Attendance
Word
Orthographic: written language Grammatical words (part of speech): e.g. orthographically "leaves" is the same, but grammatically it can be a verb and a noun. Lexemes: a set of words which share the same basic meaning, similiar forms and the same word class (or part of speech) e.g. leaves, left, leaving, leave
Phrase
More than one word A group of words They can be embedded: e.g. They passed the table with the two men. Types: head/noun phrase, verb phrase, adjective phrase, adverb phrase, prepositional phrase.
Clause
One or more phrases Able to occur independently Five major valency patterns: intransitive, monotransitive, copular, ditransitive, complex transitive.
Word: Morphology
Lexical words can have a single morpheme (stem) or a more complex structure through: inflection (by using suffixes to indicate a role within a word class) derivation (by adding affixes creating new lexemes) compounding (another form of derivation)
Look at the images comparing the fixation points and saccades in reading.
Discussion
What does these images tell you about how people differ in processing multi-word units? What does this tell you about way people process or use language?
Graph
What does this information tell you about lexical words? What does this information tell you about the different genres of text / written or spoken language? What does this information tell you about how grammar is used or how it should be taught or learned?
Function Words
determiners pronouns auxiliary verbs prepositions adverbial particles coordinators (also known as conjunction) subordinators