PHRASEOLOGY - Phraseology is the branch of lexicology specializing in word-groups, which are characterized by stability of structure and transferred meaning.
. set-expressions - . set-expressions
- . set-phrases
- . fixed word groups
- . collocations
- . phraseological units
- . idioms
Free word-groups are so called not because of any absolute freedom in using them. Nothing is entirely free in speech as its linear relationships are governed, restricted and regulated, on the one hand, by requirements of logic and common sense and, on the other, by the rules of grammar. - Free word-groups are so called not because of any absolute freedom in using them. Nothing is entirely free in speech as its linear relationships are governed, restricted and regulated, on the one hand, by requirements of logic and common sense and, on the other, by the rules of grammar.
- One can speak of a dark-eyed girl but not of a dark eyed table (unless in a piece of modernistic poetry where anything is possible). Also to say the child was glad is quite correct, but a glad child is wrong because in Modern English glad is attributively used only with a very limited number of nouns (e.g. glad news), and names of persons are not among them.
- substantive
- verbal
- adjectival
- adverbial
- interjectional
fixedness of components - fixedness of components
- unchangeability of order
- metaphoric meaning
- Characteristic features of phraseological units
A phraseological unit can be defined as a reproduced and idiomatic (non-motivated) or partially motivated unit built up according to the model of free word-groups or sentences (proverbs and sayings) and semantically and syntactically brought into correlation with words. - A phraseological unit can be defined as a reproduced and idiomatic (non-motivated) or partially motivated unit built up according to the model of free word-groups or sentences (proverbs and sayings) and semantically and syntactically brought into correlation with words.
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