Monday, January 6, 2014

For Students of General Linguistics

What is Grammar? What are the basic units of grammar? What are variable and invariable words? What are the differences between free and bound morphemes and roots and affixes? Is word-order important in English? What is word-class analysis in English?
Until fairly recent years, many linguists divided grammar into morphology and syntax, but Chomsky and the transformational-generative linguists divided it into morphology, syntax and phonology. Grammar is concerned with the description and analysis of stretches of utterances or stretches of writing and is organised on two dimensions: syntagmatic and paradigmatic. It seeks to discover the grammatical linguistic universals shared by all languages, i.e., universal grammar.
          In the European tradition grammar has been built on the word as the basic unit. But linguists have pointed out that within the grammatical structure of words, smaller units must be recognised. These are called morphemes. Grammar operates between the upper limit of the sentence and the lower limit of the morpheme.
          Variable words are those in which ordered and regular series of grammatically different word forms are found, wherein part remains relatively constant and the variations in the other parts are matched by similar variations in other words. In English WALK, WALKS, WALKING, WALKED, CAT, CATS, etc., are variable words. Words appearing in only one form are invariable words, such as English SINCE, WHEN, SELDOM, etc.
          A free morpheme is one that may constitute a word (free form) by itself; a bound morpheme is one that must appear with at least one other morpheme, bound or free, in a word. In English CATS, ‘cat’ is a free morpheme while ‘-s’ is a bound morpheme. Morphemes may be divided into roots and affixes; the root is being that part of a word structure which is left when all the affixes have been removed. Root morphemes may be bound or free and they are not limited in number. Affixes are bound morphemes and they are limited in number. All words may be said to contain a root morpheme and some words contain more than one root. In the English word LOVELY, ‘love’ is the root and ‘ly’ is the affix. Bound roots are relatively few, but some are found, such as –ceive, -tain and –cur in receive, retain, and recur. A few English roots have bound and free variants, such as sleep and slep- and child and child- . Affixes may be divided formally into three major positional classes: prefix, infix and suffix. In English re- and pre- are prefixes while –s and –ly are suffixes. English does not have true infixes except in one mode of analysis of some plurals like foot-feet and colloquial Singabloodypore and guaran-damn-tee. Compound words in English may include one or more bound roots as in ‘ethnobotony’ (ethno-botan-y, bound root+bound root+suffix).
          Word order in English is essential to syntax. Changing the word order may change the meaning of English sentences and sometimes can render them ungrammatical. 
The men eat
†Men the eat
The hunter killed the tiger
The tiger killed the hunter

          Word class analysis has long been familiar in Europe under the title PARTS OF SPEECH, and for many centuries grammarians have operated with nine word classes or parts of speech: noun, verb, pronoun, adjective, adverb, preposition, conjunction, article, and interjection. Words in frequent use have to be classified under more than one head. The English classes NOUN, VERB and ADJECTIVE are required respectively for words like ‘death’, ‘pursue’ and ‘malicious’ each of which belongs to one class only. Words like ‘work’ belong both to the NOUN and VERB classes. Words like ‘mature’ belong to the VERB and ADJECTIVE classes. Words like ‘choice’ belong to the ADJECTIVE and NOUN classes (choicest flowers; you may take your choice). The English word ‘round’ belongs to five classes:
1.     One round is enough = noun
2.     You round the bend quickly = verb
3.     A round tower = adjective
4.      He came round = adverb
5.     He wondered around the tower = preposition
Word classes may be OPEN or CLOSED; an open class is unlimited in membership, such as nouns, adjectives, adverbs and verbs in English. A closed class contains a fixed and limited number of members, such as pronouns, prepositions and conjunctions in English.

Source: Robins, R. (1964). General linguistics: An introductory survey.

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