D. V. Demidov
part of speech. The said three factors of categorial characterization
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part of speech. The said three factors of categorial characterization of words are conventionally referred to as, respectively, ―meaning‖, ―form‖, and ―function‖. 3. A comprehensive approach to the discrimination of parts of speech. The complex approach to the problem of parts of speech classification was introduced by academician L. V. Shcherba, who proposed to discriminate parts of speech on the basis of three criteria: semantic, formal and functional. By the semantic criterion he understood the generalized meaning or general grammatical meaning, which is characteristic of all the words, constituting a given part of speech, i.e. categorial meaning of parts of speech (e.g. the general grammatical meaning of nouns is substance; verbs – verbiality, i.e. the ability to express actions, processes or states; adverbs – adverbiality, i.e. the ability to express qualities or properties of actions, processes or states; adjectives – qualitiativeness, i.e. the ability to express qualities or properties of substances). Taken separately, the semantic criterion cannot be sufficient for word class discrimination, as there are lexemes of a part of speech, which acquire the general meaning of the other part of speech (e.g. action – a noun, which expresses verbiality, sleep – a noun, which expresses process, blackness – a noun, which expresses quality). Thus, the general grammatical categorial meaning is important for part of speech classification, it is the intrinsic quality of a part of speech, it predetermines some outward properties of its lexemes but it cannot play the role of a n absolute criterion of word classification. 47 The formal criterion provides for the exposition of the specific inflexional and derivational (word-building) features of words of a part of speech and deals with the morphological properties of words, which include: 1) the system of inflexional morphemes of words, typical of a certain part of speech; 2) the system of derivational lexico-grammatical morphemes, characteristic of a part of speech. Each part of speech is characterized by its grammatical categories, manifested in the paradigms of lexemes (e.g. nouns – have the categories of number and case; verbs – have the categories of mood, tense, aspect, voice, person, number; adjectives – have the category of degrees of comparison). Thus, the paradigms of words, belonging to different parts of speech are different and these paradigms show to what part of speech the word belongs. As words of different classes are also characterized by a specific system of derivational morphemes, the presence of a certain lexico-grammatical morpheme in the word signals its part of speech reference. Many of these derivational morphemes are regularly used to form the words of a part of speech, other stem- building elements are of little significance as distinctive features of a part of speech because they are not systematic and may be found within separate lexemes of a class (e.g. : food – feed; blood-bleed; full – fill). Thus, the morphological composition or stem- structure is one of the criteria employed for part of speech classification but it cannot function separately in order to classify words. Many English words of different classes consist only of roots and have no derivational morphemes in their structure. The functional criterion concerns the syntactic properties of a part of speech, which are of two kinds: combinability and syntactic functions in the sentence. The combinability is the ability 48 of words of a given part of speech to be in syntactic connection with other words in the sentence. A word has different syntactic connections. These connections are not equally significant for parts of speech reference. But the connection of the noun with the verb is less significant than its connection with the adjective. Owning to the lexico-grammatical meaning of nouns (substance) and prepositions (relation to substance) these two parts of speech often form up word combinations. The article is characterized by unilateral right- hand connections with different classes of words. Thus, the combinability of a word, its connections in speech help to show to what part of speech it belongs. Parts of speech perform certain syntactic functions in the sentence: nouns – of the subject and object, verbs – of predicates; adjectives – attributes) but the subject may be expressed not only by nouns and nouns can perform practically all syntactic functions. Thus, due to the little significance of the syntactic function of a word in identifying its class reference, this criterion is the least helpful. None of the above mentioned criteria is sufficient to be an absolute principle of word discrimination. Only all of them taken together give a fully satisfactory basis for part of speech classification. Thus, a part of speech is a set of words characterized by identical properties: 1) general grammatical meaning; 2) lexico- grammatical morphemes (derivational or stem- building); 3) grammatical categories; 4) combinability; 5) functions in the sentence. As the dominant criteria in parts of speech classification are grammatical, it is reasonable to refer to word classes, traditionally called ―parts of speech‖ as grammatical word classes. |
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