- •1. Theoretical grammar and its subject.
- •2. Functions of the indefinite article.
- •3. Definition and general characteristics of the word-group.
- •1. General principles of grammatical analysis.
- •2. Functions of the definite article.
- •3. Classification of word-groups.
- •1. General characteristics of language as a functional system.
- •2. Functions of the zero article.
- •3. Subordinate word-groups.
- •1. Notions of ‘system’ and ‘structure’.
- •2. The main features of the verb.
- •3. The noun-phrase (np).
- •1. General characteristics of linguistic units.
- •2. Classifications of English verbs.
- •3. Noun-phrases with pre-posed adjuncts.
- •1. Linguistic unit.
- •2. Forms of verb stems.
- •3. The verb-phrase.
- •1. Language and speech.
- •2. The division of the verbs.
- •3. Classification of verb-phrases.
- •1. Systemic relations in language.
- •2. The inner character of the process denoted by the verb.
- •3. Predicative word-groups.
- •1. General characteristics of the grammatical structure of language.
- •2. Aspective subclasses of verbs.
- •3. The sentence.
- •1. Structural types of languages.
- •2. The binary actional-statal distribution.
- •3. Different approaches to the study of the sentence.
- •1. Morphology and syntax as two parts of linguistic description.
- •2. The category of voice.
- •3. The utterance. Informative structure of the utterance.
- •1. A word as a complex linguistic unit.
- •2. The category of tense.
- •3. Text as a syntactic unit.
- •2. The Category of aspect.
- •3. The notion of coherence.
- •2. General characteristics of syntax.
- •3. The notion of cohesion. Text connecting devices.
- •1. Grammatical categories.
- •2. Basic units of Syntax: Phrase and sentence.
- •3. Textual deictic markers.
- •1. The notion of opposition.
- •2. Main types of syntactic relations.
- •3. Basic notions of pragmatic linguistics.
- •1. Transposition and neutralization of morphological forms.
- •2. Nominative classification of phrases.
- •3. Classifications of speech acts. Indirect speech acts.
- •1. The parts of speech problem.
- •2. The basic principles of sentence division.
- •3. Discourse analysis. Implicatures and indirectness of discourse.
- •1. Word classes.
- •2. Language means of expressing the theme (Языковые средства выражения темы)
- •3. Textual deictic markers.
- •1. Criteria of characterisation of the Noun.
- •2. Language means of expressing the rheme (Языковые средства выражения темы)
- •3. Classifications of English verbs.
- •1. The category of number.
- •2. Classification of sentences.
- •3. The parts of speech problem.
- •1. The category of case.
- •2. Kinds of syntactic theories.
- •3. Structural types of languages.
- •1. General characteristics of English verbs.
- •2. Basic syntactic notions.
- •3. The article. Functions of the articles.
- •1. The article. Functions of the articles.
- •2. Syntactic relations.
- •3. Classifications of English verbs.
Билет 1
1. Theoretical grammar and its subject.
The term “grammar” goes back to a Greek word that may be translated as the “art of writing”. But later this word acquired a much wider sense and came to embrace the whole study of language. Now it is often used as the synonym of linguistics. A question comes immediately to mind: what does this study involve?
Grammar may be practical and theoretical. The aim of practical grammar is the description of grammar rules that are necessary to understand and formulate sentences. The aim of theoretical grammar is to offer explanation for these rules. Generally speaking, theoretical grammar deals with the language as a functional system.
The following course of theoretical grammar serves to describe the grammatical structure of the English language as a system where all parts are interconnected. The difference between theoretical and practical grammar lies in the fact that practical grammar prescribes certain rules of usage and teaches to speak (or write) correctly whereas theoretical grammar presents facts of language, while analyzing them, and gives no prescriptions.
Unlike school grammar, theoretical grammar does not always produce a ready-made decision. In language there are a number of phenomena interpreted differently by different linguists. To a great extent, these differences are due to the fact that there exist various directions in linguistics, each having its own method of analysis and, therefore, its own approach to the matter. But sometimes these differences arise because some facts of language are difficult to analyze, and in this case the only thing to offer is a possible way to solve the problem, instead of giving a final solution. It is due to this circumstance that there are different theories of the same language phenomenon, which is not the case with practical grammar.
2. Functions of the indefinite article.
The Indefinite Article( a ,an ) is a weakened form of the numeral “one” and is historically related to it. It has 3 functions:
· Classifying (meaning “one of” ). For example: It’s a letter.
· Generalizing (meaning “any” ) .For example: A tiger is a dangerous animal
· Numerical (meaning “one” ).For example: Wait a minute!
The Indefinite article is used only with singular nouns. In the plural such nouns are used without any article. For example: There are books on the shelves
Note
In English the nouns advice, information, fun, luck, news, weather are never used with the indefinite article.
A noun with the indefinite article in the classifying function always contains the novelty of information, therefore this article is used before nouns whose referents are mentioned in the situation of speech for the first time. For example: there’s a man waiting for you…
3. Definition and general characteristics of the word-group.
There are a lot of definitions concerning the word-group. The most adequate one seems to be the following: the word-group is a combination of at least two notional words which do not constitute the sentence but are syntactically connected. According to some other scholars (the majority of Western scholars and professors B.Ilyish and V.Burlakova – in Russia), a combination of a notional word with a function word (on the table) may be treated as a word-group as well. The problem is disputable as the role of function words is to show some abstract relations and they are devoid of nominative power. On the other hand, such combinations are syntactically bound and they should belong somewhere.
General characteristics of the word-group are:
1) As a naming unit it differs from a compound word because the number of constituents in a word-group corresponds to the number of different denotates:
a black bird – чорний птах (2), a blackbird – дрізд (1);
a loud speaker (2), a loudspeaker (1).
2) Each component of the word-group can undergo grammatical changes without destroying the identity of the whole unit: to see a house - to see houses.
3) A word-group is a dependent syntactic unit, it is not a communicative unit and has no intonation of its own.
Билет 2
