D. V. Demidov
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- Topic 4. General Survey of the Noun and its Categories. Questions for Discussion
- 1. Noun as the central nominative lexemic unit of language, its categorial meaning and formal characteristics.
Questions for Reflection:
1. Can the term ―parts of speech‖ be considered a suitable one? 2. What are the existing approaches to the parts of speech problem? 3. What does the classical approach consist in? What principle served as the basis of classification? 4. What syntactic properties of a part of speech does the functional criterion concerns? 5. What principle was H. Sweet‘s classification based on? 6. What methods does the structural approach rely on? 7. What principle lay in the basis of Ch. Fries‘s classification? What were the substitution patterns? How many classes did Ch. Fries single out? How many groups of functional words? 8. What criteria are used by the adherents of the complex approach? What parts of speech are traditionally singled out? 9. What are the merits and demerits of the traditional classification of words into parts of speech? 10. What is the difference between notional classes and function words? 11. What results of the four approaches to the parts of speech problem coincide and what results differ? 54 Topic 4. General Survey of the Noun and its Categories. Questions for Discussion: 1. Noun as the central nominative unit of language, its categorial meaning and formal characteristics. 2. The noun as an attribute (―the cannon ball problem‖). 3. Formal and functional peculiarities of the category of number. 4. The problem of the category of case and various approaches to its study. 5. The meaningful character of the gender category in modern English. Gender oppositions and classes of nouns. 6. The system of article determination in English. 1. Noun as the central nominative lexemic unit of language, its categorial meaning and formal characteristics. The noun as a part of speech has the categorial meaning of ―substance‖ or ―thingness‖. It follows from this that the noun is the main nominative part of speech, effecting nominatio n of the fullest value within the framework of the notional division of the lexicon. Nouns directly name various phenomena of reality and have the strongest nominative force among notional parts of speech: practically every phenomenon can be presented by a noun as an independent referent, or, can be substantivized. Nouns denote things and objects proper (tree), abstract notions (love), various qualities (bitterness), and even actions (movement). All these words function in speech in the same way as nouns de noting things proper. The noun has the power, by way of nomination, to isolate different properties of substances (i.e. direct and oblique qualities, and also actions and states as processual characteristics of 55 substantive phenomena) and present them as corresponding self- dependent substances. E.g.: Her words were unexpectedly bitter. – We were struck by the unexpected bitterness of her words. At that time he was down in his career, but we knew well that very soon he would be up again. – His career had its ups and downs. [2, p. 49] Formally, the noun is characterized by a specific set of word-building affixes and word-building models, which unmistakably mark a noun, among them: suffixes of the doer (worker, naturalist), suffixes of abstract notions (laziness, rotation, security, elegance), special conversion patterns (to find – a find), etc. As for word-changing categories, the noun is changed according to the categories of number (boy-boys), case (boy- boy‟s), and article determination (boy, a boy, the boy). Formally the noun is also characterized by specific combinability with verbs, adjectives and other nouns, introduced either by preposition or by sheer contact. The noun is the only part of speech which can be prepositionally combined with other words, e.g.: the book of the teacher, to go out of the room, away from home, typical of the noun, etc. The most characteristic functions of the noun in a sentence are the function of a subject and an object, since they commonly denote persons and things as components of the situation, e.g.: The teacher took the book. Besides, the noun can function as a predicative (part of a compound predicate), e.g.: He is a teacher; and as an adverbial modifier, e.g.: It happened last summer. The noun in English can also function as an attribute in the following cases: when it is used in the genitive case (the teacher‟s book), when it is used with a preposition (the book of the teacher), or in contact groups of two nouns the first of which qualifies the second (cannon ball, space exploration, sea breeze, the Bush administration, etc.). |
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