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Topic 3. The Theory of Grammatical Classes of Words.
Questions for Discussion:
1. The study of grammatical classes of words.
2. Contemporary criteria for classifying
words into parts of
speech.
3. A comprehensive approach to the discrimination of
parts of speech.
4. The notional and functional parts of speech.
5. Parts of speech subcategorisation.
1. The study of grammatical classes of words.
The words of language, depending
on various formal and
semantic features, are divided into gra mmatically relevant sets or
classes. The traditional grammatical classes of words are called
―parts of speech‖. Since the word is
distinguished not only by
grammatical, but also by semantico- lexemic properties, some
scholars (V. Smirnitsky) refer to parts of speech as ―lexico-
grammatical‖ series of words, or as
“lexico-grammatical
categories” [12, p. 100]. Prof. M. Blokh
introduced the term
“grammatical classes‖. He starts from the assumption that what
is traditionally called a part of speech is a type of word, which
grammatically differs from other types of words. [2, p. 68]
It should be noted that the traditional term ―parts of
speech‖ was developed in Ancient Greek
linguistics and reflects
the fact that at that time there was no distinction between langua ge
as a system and speech, between the word as a part of an utterance
and the word as a part of lexis. The term ―parts of speech‖ is
accepted by modern linguistics as a conventional, or ―non-
explanatory‖ term (―name-term‖)
to denote the lexico-
grammatical classes of words correlating with each other in the
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general system of language on the basis of their grammatically
relevant properties.
The system of parts of speech
is historically changeable,
e.g. articles, modal verbs, statives were not recognized as separate
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