
- •Etymological survey of the English word-stock:
- •2. Word-formation in Modern English:
- •1. Etymological survey of the English word-stock Working Definitions of Principal Concepts.
- •Ukrainian-English lexical correlations
- •2. Word-formation in Modern English Working Definitions of Principal Concepts
- •Typical semantic relations within a converted pair
- •1. Etymological survey of the English word-stock:
- •2. Word-formation in Modern English:
- •Reading in Modern Lexicology: Хрестоматія з порівняльної лексикології. - Черкаси, 2002-160 с.
- •Мостовий m.I. Лексикологія англійської мови. - Харків, 1993. - с. 151-174.
- •Antonyms
- •1. Language and Speech
- •2. Linguistic levels
- •3. Practical and theoretical grammar
- •4. The features of an analytical language:
- •5. Morphology and Syntax.
- •6. Word.
- •7. Morpheme.
- •8. Different approaches to the classification of words
- •9. Scerba's classification of words.
- •10. Notional and functional parts of speech.
- •1. Language and Speech
- •2. Linguistic levels
- •3. Practical and theoretical grammar
- •4. The features of an analytical language:
- •5. Morphology and Syntax.
- •6. Word.
- •7. Morpheme.
- •8. Different approaches to the classification of words
- •9. Scerba's classification of words.
- •10. Notional and functional parts of speech.
- •1. Sentence: General
- •2. Actual division of the sentence.
- •3. Communicative types of sentences.
- •4. Simple sentence: constituent structure.
- •5. Composite sentence as a polypredicative construction.
- •6. Complex sentence.
- •7. Compound sentence.
- •9. Sentence in the text
- •1. Noun.
- •2. Verb.
- •Vu™,isjyn*j meet him tell him the trulli._ (conditior.)
- •1. General notes on style and stylistics.
- •2. Expressive means (em) and stylistic devices (sd)
- •3. Types of lexical meaning.
- •4. Stylistic classification of the English vocabulary.
- •1. Phonetic expressive means and stylistic devices Onomatopoeia
- •2. Interaction of different types of lexical meaning
- •Interjections and Exclamatory Words
- •4. Compositional patterns of syntactical arrangement:
2. Verb.
Verb has the categorial meaning of action or process, dynamic, taking place at some time.
Verb is a word representing phenomena of objective reality as process. We can say that leaning a language is to a very large degree learning how to operate the verbal forms of the language.
Productive verb-building suffixes:
en: strengthen, shorten
fy: simplify, terrify
ize: mobilize, equalize Non-productive:
ate: facilitate
er: glimmer
ish: establish
Compound verbs: microfilm, free-wheel.
Conversion: blackmail.
Grammatical suffixes: - ed (regular, most productive in present day
English): worked;
irregular: unchangeable -put-put-put
mixed — keep-kept-kept suppletive - be, am, is/are, was/were, been.
Notional verbs are characterized by full lexical meaning, expressing an action or process, are used independently: The teacher initiated his pupils in the mysteries of grammar.
56
Functional verbs serve primarily to indicate grammatical functions rather than to bear lexical meaning: The boy was resentful of the remark. They may be classified into:
auxiliaries (be, have, do, let, shall, will for making up analytical forms): Don *t stuff the child with food.
link verbs: be, keep (the quality preserved): The news is alarming.
become, get, turn (the change of the quality): The girl got angry.
c) substitute verb: do
Then I shall take steps to exclude all possibility of doubt.
Do.
representing verbs: do, have, be. I wish I could travel more frequently but I don't.
verb-intensifiers: do, go, go +verb + ing.
Modal Verbs express attitude of the doer to the action that is considered as possible, desirable, necessary, obligatory, etc.
Forms: can — could; may — might; must, shall, should, will, would, ought to,
need, dare, have/had to.
Can/could express ability (be able to, be capable to, know how to), permission, possibility; could - permission, possibility or ability in unreal conditions: If we had some opportunity we could include you in our group. Could/can you do me a favour? You can go now.
Can - be able to:
/ ran fast and could catch the bus (but didn't manage).
I ran fast and was able to catch the bus (managed to catch it).
To be able' is not the modal equivalent of'can'. This combination has quite different combinability:
1. with other modal verbs: She must have been able to imagine the conversation.
with 4o be going': He wasn 't going to be able to take.
with 'should/would like': I'd like to be able to read.
with adverbs: He had never been able to have exclusive privileges.
'feel/seem able to': I feel able to resent his words.
in gerundial and infinitival construction: It's rotten not to be able to ski. May/might express permission (be allowed to), possibility. Might - mostly
possibility and rather rare permission: What you say might be true.
vlust expresses obligation or compulsion, logical necessity: ТІгєгс must he a
;ї4олт try' io tr»orc often used now instead of 'must': Do л'ои have to do it?
Shall expresses intention, willingness, insistence (restricted use), helplessness, perplexity, asks tor instruction: / shall not be long. He shall do as 1 say. Shall I read?
Q1....1 J ......л.с.с лК1! "Vatf/Mi ІЛ-.Ї.---- ї Г.МІ--ЛСГ if-'' X/,-.i ch,■-, -i ilrl ГІГ. ■-,<■ 1,1 C-ViW
57
Will expresses willingness, polite request, intention, insistence (no contraction!), prediction: Will you open the book at page 25? I will explain to you as soon as I can.
Would expresses willingness, insistence, characteristic activity, probability, violation, preference: Would you excuse me? You would work at it hard. He would make a mess of it (It's typical of him).
Tense — the time of the action. On objective reality we deal with present time (the moment of the objective 'now'), past time (the time before 'now'), future time (the time afternow). Processes take place in time:
In the morning the alarm-clock rings up and walks me up.
Yesterday the alarm-clock rang up and woke me up.
Tomorrow the alarm-clock will ring up and wake r,ic up.
The time of the action/process is tense in English. Tense is a verb form that shows the time of an action or event. Any process that takes place in a period of rime including the moment of speaking is considered as belonging to Present Tense: She stuffs her handkerchief into her dress pocket. Any process that took
•jjiciK,^ uvxvuw tuv uivmiciii \ji ■speartiiig ccivrsis^cs tw wit і азі t^iisc s. ritz уилгт rnuuc urt
f}wtr>Yrrr>v*r*\i іґіілИІіґігг А-рл/ птрасс tnot \іл1і foVp» nla/>p a-ft<=»t» tn*^ тг>г\т<ат-іт rff cnoQlrir»f» »..!.... і . .• I. . r? j . 'r • / . ? • ?? 7 T • • • 7 Г» - .. f*. . j
j_, ».w ^їі-_ і. ...-,--ctw . vnjv/. хиїли^с. tcutacr j r^ttt пике слсшо^б |/r (снех^. jl uivvl
and Continuous do not express the time of the action. The time of the action in all languages can be only present, past and future. The category of tense is exnressed in the predicate.
Aspect is the form of the verb that serves to express the manner in which the исіГил із performed. It shows whether the action is a single accomplished action or a continuous process. Aspect concerns the manner in which a verbal action is nzricneed or regarded:
He gives an account of everything.
He is giving an account of his visit now.
Form-markers of acpect: be + V + ing.
Opposition: Duration: :Non-Duration (Continuous) (Common)
Aspect in English and "Вид" in Russian or Ukrainian have different categorial meaning:
aspect - the manner in which the action is performed;
- the qualitative limit /совершенный: несовершенный/
Mood.
The category of Mood in the present English verb has been in so many different ways, that it seems hardly possible to arrive at any more or less convincing and universally acceptable conclusion concerning it.
58
The category of Mood reflects the relations of the action denotes by the verb and reality from the speaker's point of view. We may wish to represent the action/process as follows:
a real fact: The institute hires hundreds of young teachers.
a command or request: Give an account of the film, please.
something that does not exist in reality, something unreal, desired, hypothetical: I wish they introduced universal vocational training.
Mood is introduced by the opposition: real: -.unreal.
I. Indicative Mood indicates the action as a real fact. It is characterized
by the time of the action, ii. imperative Mood expresses inducement of various degrees of
1 ;=-;-c-vc b-v-ludlng vuiumands, but the action itself is to take place in
(
yf
this
'•' Oblique Moods represent an action as something imaginary, unreal, desired, hypothetical. There is no straightforward mutual relation between meaning and torrn:
1) one and the same form may have diiicrcni meaning; 11 is strange that he should resent it. (supposition)