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preface to his grammar book he wrote: “I reject “phrase” altogether as a
grammatical term, because of the endless confusions that arise between
the various arbitrary meanings given to it by various grammarians
and its popular meaning” (H. Sweet. A New English Grammar. Part I,
p. viii). The author prefers to speak of word-groups, but defines this
notion in the same way as the phrase used to be defined. According to
H. Sweet, the relations between the elements of a word-group are based
on grammatical and logical subordination. E. Kruisinga developed
his own theory of close word-groups (including verb-groups, noun-
groups, adjective-groups, adverb-groups, preposition-groups with the
subordination of their elements) and loose words-groups (without
subordination). In the history of phrase, O. Jespersen is known for
his theory of three ranks and the differentiation of junction and nexus
described in his book “The Philosophy of Grammar”. In any composite
denomination he finds one word of supreme importance to which the
others are joined as subordinated. The chief word is defined by another
word which, in its turn, may be defined by a third word, etc. In the
combination
extremely hot weather
the last word, which is the chief
idea, is called primary;
hot
which defines
weather
— secondary, and
extremely
— tertiary. According to O. Jespersen there is no need to
distinguish more than three ranks of subordination in the attributive
combinations of this kind.
The difference between the notions of junction and nexus is the
difference between attributive and predicative relations. In particular,
O. Jespersen says that in a junction the joining of two elements is so
close that they may be considered one composite name, e.
g. a silly
person — a fool.
If we compare
the red door
(junction) on the one hand,
and
the door is red
(nexus) on the other, we find that the former kind is
more rigid and stiff, and the latter more pliable, there is more life in it.
Junction is like a picture, nexus is like a drama or a process.
The basis of the structural theory of word-groups is the dichotomic
division into endocentric (containing a head-word) and exocentric
(non-headed) phrases, proposed by L. Bloomfield. Transformational
grammar does not discuss word-groups in isolation, but the analysis of
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sentences is based on the concept of phrase-structure (NP and VP), and
some transformations result in word-groups, e. g. the transformation of
nominalization.
Structural linguists give the following classification of word-groups:
Noun gr.
Modifier gr. Verbal gr. Prepositional gr. Subject-predicate gr.
Verb gr.
Headed (subordinative)
Non-headed (coordinative)
Word-groups
Tail-head
Head-tail
V. V. Burlakova has made some amendments in the classification
above. In the left-hand part, she added adverb-groups to the tail-head
set. In her opinion, verb-groups as well as prepositional groups belong
to the head-tail set; noun-groups and adjective-groups can be found
in both tail-head set and head-tail set. In the right-hand part, she has
introduced dependent and independent subclasses, distinguishing
between coordinative groups, accumulative groups, groups with
primary predication, and groups with secondary predication.
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