= 161. 2*362 (075. 8) К211 ббк [81. 2-2 Англ + 81. 2-2 Укр] я 73


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knizhka Karamisheva

dmimie);
2) Different meanings of some nouns in the singular and the
plural form, e.g.: advice - advices (порода - eidoMOcmi), manner -
manners (cnoci6 поведтка, манеры), work - works (пращ,
робота - завод)
etc.

  1. Some cases when there are two plural forms, having a different meaning, e.g; brothers (сини odniei Mamepi) - brethren (члени однгег громади) etc.

  2. The usage of some forms of nouns in the singular meaning (with the verb form also in singular), e.g.: news, gallows (шибениия), summons (виклик), wages, goods (товар), works (завод); some names of sciences, illnesses, games: linguistics, physics, mathematics, measles, billiards etc.


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The absence of such phenomena in Ukrainian witnesses that in this language the forms of singular and plural are opposed more distinctly: the category of number is expressed more consistently (категор!я числа в 1менниках виражена бшьш послщовно).
3. The category of case
The category of case of nouns is the system of opposemes (such as girl - girl's in English, xama - xamu - xami - хату - хатою -(на) xami - xamo in Ukrainian) showing the relations of a noun to other words in speech. Case relations reflect the relations of the substances the nouns name to other substances, actions, states, etc. in the world of reality. Case is the grammatical form of a noun, which reveals its relation towards other words fulfilling the functions of
parts of the given sentence (Вщмшок - це граматична форма
(менника, яка передав його вадношення до шших ошв, що
виступають у функци члешв цього речения).
Case is one of those categories which show the close connection
(a) between language and speech, (b) between morphology and
syntax:
a) A case opposeme is, like any other opposeme, a unit of the language system, but the essential difference between the members of a case opposeme is in their combinability in speech. This is particularly clear in a language like Ukrainian with a developed case system. Compare, for instance, the combinability of the nominative case and that of the oblique/indirect cases. See also the difference in the combinability of each oblique case (непрямий ввдшнок): схвалювати вчинок, не схвалювати вчинку, дивуватися вчинку/вчинков1, захоплюватисъ вчинком, etc.
We can see here that the difference between the cases is not so much a matter of meaning as a matter of combinability. It can be said that вчинок - вчинку - вчинков1 - вчинком, etc. are united paradigmatically in the Ukrainian language on the basis of their syntagmatic differences in speech. The same is true for the English case opposeme.
b) Though case is a morphological category it has distinct syntactical significance. The common case grammemes fulfill a number of syntactical functions not typical of possessive case
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grammemes, among them the functions of subject and object. The possessive case noun is for the most part employed as an attribute.
All case opposemes are identical in content: they contain two particular meanings, of "common case" and "possessive case" united by the general meaning of the category, that of "case". There is not much variety in the form of case opposemes either, which distinguishes English from Ukrainian.
An English noun lexeme may contain two case opposemes at most (man - man's, men - men's). Some lexemes have but one opposeme (England - England's, cattle - cattle's). Many lexemes have no case opposemes at all (book, news, foliage). That is not true for the Ukrainian language.
Thus, - 's is the only positive case morpheme of English nouns. It would be no exaggeration to say that the whole category depends on this morpheme [24; 59-61]. This can be explained by the fact that in English the category of case is the remnants of the former inflexional structure and is represented by a rather small number of forms. The linguistic literature abounds in discussions concerning the existence of the case categoiy in the sphere of the English noun as well as concerning the system of its case forms. Nevertheless, traditional school grammars express the view that modern English has two noun cases: the Common Case (загальний вщмшок) and the Possessive Case (присвшний вцгшнок, школи називають родовий).

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