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ЎЗБЕКИСТОН РЕСПУБЛИКАСИ ОЛИЙ ВА ЎРТА МАХСУС ТАЪЛИМ ВАЗИРЛИГИ ЎЗБЕКИСТОН ДАВЛАТ ЖАҲОН ТИЛЛАРИ УНИВЕРСИТЕТИ ИНГЛИЗ ТИЛИ БИРИНЧИ ФАКУЛЬТЕТИ ИНГЛИЗ ТИЛИ ФОНЕТИКА ВА ФОНОЛОГИЯСИ КАФЕДРАСИ Раҳматов Бекзод Ўктам ўғли Functional words in the English language and the methods of their teaching 5220100 – Филология ва тилларни ўқитиш (инглиз тили) таълим йуналиши бўйича бакалавр даражасини олиш учун БИТИРУВ МАЛАКАВИЙ ИШИ “ҲИМОЯГА ТАВСИЯ ЭТИЛАДИ” ИЛМИЙ РАХБАР: “Инглиз тили фонетика ва фонологияси” _________ Д. Аликулова кафедраси мудири “____”___________2014 йил _________М.Чўтпўлатов “____”___________2014 йил Тошкент – 2014 2 THE MINISTRY OF HIGHER AND SECONDARY SPECIAL EDUCATION OF THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN UZBEKISTAN STATE UNIVERSITY OF WORLD LANGUAGES THE FIRST ENGLISH LANGUAGE FACULTY THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY Rakhmatov Bekzod Uktam o’g’li Functional words in the English language and the methods of their teaching 5220100 – Philology and teaching languages (The English language) for granting bachelor’s degree QUALIFICATION PAPER QUALIFICATION PAPER Scientific advisor: IS ADMITTED TO DEFENCE D.Alikulova The Head of the Department of “ English Phonetics and Phonology M. Chutpulatov “ ” 2014 Tashkent - 2014 3 ” 2014 CONTENT Introduction…………………………………………………………………..…3 1.0 Chapter I. Review of the linguistic literature on the problem of classifying the words into parts of speech 1.1. The Problem of parts of speech…………………..………………………....6 1.2. The principle of grouping the words into grammatical classes…….……...18 1.3. The syntactic-distributional classification of words……………………….25 2.0 Chapter II. Contextual-semantics of grammatical classification of words used in P.Abraham’s “The Path of Thunder” 2.1. Grammatical classes of words……………………..……………………....28 2.2. From building means of parts of speech……………………………….......35 2.3. Type of grammatical meaning used in P.Abraham’s “The Path of Thunder”…………………………………………………….……40 3.0 CHAPTER III. Aspects of teaching grammatical structure 3.1 Problems of teaching grammar………………………………………….….51 3.2 Teaching of grammatical classification of words to the elementary and intermediate level students…………………………………………………58 4.0 Conclusion…………………………………………………….…………...67 5.0 Bibliography………………………………………………………………71 4 Introduction “The main objective of all our reforms in the field of education is individual. Therefore the task of education, the task of national renaissance will remain the prerogative of the state and constitute a majority. For this, the power of foreign languages also must work in new generation mind.”1 Conditions of reforming of all education system the question of the world assistance to improvement of quality of scientific-theoretical aspect, educational process is especially actually put. Speaking about the 23rd anniversary of National Independence the President I.A.Karimov has declared in the program speech “Harmoniously development of generation a basis of progress of Uzbekistan”:” …all of us realize, that achievement of the great purpose put today before us, noble aspirations, it is necessary for updating a society.” The effect and destiny of our reforms carried out in the name of progress and the future, results of our intentions are connected with highly skilled, conscious staff, the experts who are meeting the requirements of time.2 Nowadays we are trying to establish a strong democratic state, of course, with the help of the new generation. I also consider myself as one of the members of this innovative people. I dare to say, foreign languages, especially English is a good source to take the advantage. So, in this very qualification paper I tried to make a good research work on the theme “Functional words in the English language and methods of their teaching”. The present qualification paper deals with the study of Functional words in English and which present a certain interest both for the theoretical investigation and for the practical language use. The actuality of the investigation is explained on one hand by the profound interest to the functional of the grammatical classification of words in the literary From the President I.A.Karimov’s report at the Oliy Majlis session of the first convocation,February, 1995. И.А.Каримов. Гармонично-развитое поколение-основа прогресса Узбекистана. Ташкент. 1998. Стр 158168 1 2 5 text and in speech, on the other hand by the absence of widely approved analysis of the grammatical classification of words from the semantic, stylistic, structural and translational points of view. The novelty of the qualification paper is defined by concrete results of the investigation. Special emphasis is laid on several of rendering the structural, the stylistic features of functional words in English. The aim of the qualification paper is to define the specific features of words in the literary text and in speech as one of the important and complicated functional words in English. According to this general aim the following concrete tasks are put forward: 1. To analyze the linguistic literature on the problem of lexical features of words. 2. To analyze actual problems the functional words in English. 5. To analyze the structural –semantic and functional characteristic of words in English. The methods of investigation used in this qualification paper are as follows: oppositional, semantic, stylistic, structural, distributional, transformation, immediate observation as well as the translation. The practical value of the research is that the material and the results of the given qualification paper can serve as the material for theoretical courses of grammar, comparative typology, translation theory as well as can be used for practical classes in oral and written speech practice, oral and written translation, home reading, current events, and others. The material includes: text books, monographs, articles, written by the leading scholars, like: L.S Barkhudarov, M.Y.Blokh, V.Ya.Plotkin and etc., 6 novels, short stories written by the American and British writers of the XXth century, internet websites with corresponding headings and data base. Theoretical importance of the qualification paper is determined by the necessity of detailed and comprehensive analyzes of functional words in English and the means of expressing the which are very of ten used in literature fluffing various stylistic or pragmatic functions. The structure of the word the given qualification paper consists of an introduction, two chapter, a conclusion and bibliography. 7 1.0. CHAPTER I. Review of the Linguistic literature on the problem of classifying the words into parts of speech 1.1. Word- as a Subject of Study The morphological system of language reveals its properties through the morphemic structure of words. It follows from this that morphology as part of grammatical theory faces the two segmental units: the morpheme and the word. But, as we have already pointed out, the morpheme is not identified otherwise than part of the word; the functions of the morpheme are effected only as the corresponding constituent functions of the word as a whole. For instance, the form of the verbal past tense is built up by means of the dental grammatical suffix: train-ed [-d]; publish-ed [-t]; meditat-ed [-id]. However, the past tense as a definite type of grammatical meaning is expressed not by the dental morpheme in isolation, but by the verb (i.e. word) taken in the corresponding form (realised by its morphemic composition); the dental suffix is immediately related to the stem of the verb and together with the stem constitutes the temporal correlation in the paradigmatic system of verbal categories Thus, in studying the morpheme we actual study the word in the necessary details or us composition and functions. It is very difficult to give a rigorous and at the same time universal definition to the word, i.e. such a definition as would unambiguously apply to all the different word-units of the lexicon. This difficulty is explained by the fact that the word is an extremely complex and many-sided phenomenon. Within the framework of different linguistic trends and theories the word is defined as the minimal potential sentence, the minimal free linguistic form, the elementary component of the sentence, the articulate sound-symbol, the grammatically arranged combination of sound with meaning, the meaningfully integral and immediately identifiable lingual unit, the uninterrupted string of morphemes, etc., etc. None of these definitions, which can be divided into formal, functional, and mixed, has the power to precisely cover all the lexical segments of language without a residue remaining outside the field of definition. 8 The said difficulties compel some linguists to refrain from accepting the word as the basic element of language. In particular, American scholars — representatives of Descriptive Linguistics founded by L. Bloomfield — recognised not the word and the sentence, but the phoneme and the morpheme as the basic categories of linguistic description, because these units are the easiest to be isolated in the continual text due to their "physically" minimal, elementary segmental character: the phoneme being the minimal formal segment of language, the morpheme, the minimal meaningful segment. Accordingly, only two segmental levels were originally identified in language by Descriptive scholars: the phonemic level and the morphemic level; later on a third one was added to these — the level of "constructions", i.e. the level of morphemic combinations. In fact, if we take such notional words as, say, water, pass, yellow and the like, as well as their simple derivatives, e.g. watery, passer, yellowness, we shall easily see their definite nominative function and unambiguous segmental delimitation, making them beyond all doubt into "separate words of language". But if we compare with the given one-stem words the corresponding composite formations, such as waterman, password, yellow back, we shall immediately note that the identification of the latter as separate words is much complicated by the fact that they themselves are decomposable into separate words. One could point out that the peculiar property distinguishing composite words from phrases is their linear indivisibility, i.e. the impossibility tor them to be divided by a third word. But this would-be rigorous criterion is quite irrelevant for analytical word forms, e.g.: has met - has never met; is coming —is not by any means or under any circumstances coming. As for the criterion according to which the word is identified as a minimal sign capable of functioning alone (the word understood as the "smallest free form", or interpreted as the "potential minimal sentence"), it is irrelevant for the bulk of functional words which cannot be used "independently" even in elliptical responses (to say nothing of the fact that the very notion of ellipsis is essentially the opposite of self-dependence). 9 In spite of the shown difficulties, however, there remains the unquestionable fact that each speaker has at his disposal a ready stock of naming units (more precisely, units standing to one another in nominative correlation) by which he can build up an infinite number of utterances reflecting the ever changing situations of reality. This circumstance urges us to seek the identification of the word as a lingual unit-type on other lines than the "strictly operational definition". In fact, we do find the clarification of the problem in taking into consideration the difference between the two sets of lingual phenomena: on the one hand, "polar" phenomena; on the other hand, "intermediary" phenomena.3 Within a complex system of interrelated elements, polar phenomena are the most clearly identifiable; they stand to one another in an utterly unambiguous opposition. Intermediary phenomena are located in the system in between the polar phenomena, making up a gradation of transitions or the so-called "continuum". By some of their properties intermediary phenomena are similar or near to one of the corresponding poles, while by other properties they are similar to the other, opposing pole. The analysis of the intermediary phenomena from the point of view of their relation to the polar phenomena reveals their own status in the system. At the same time this kind of analysis helps evaluate the definitions of the polar phenomena between which a continuum is established. In this connection, the notional one-stem word and the morpheme should be described as the opposing polar phenomena among the meaningful segments of language; it is these elements that can be defined by their formal and functional features most precisely and unambiguously. As for functional words, they occupy intermediary positions between these poles, and their very intermediary status is gradational. In particular, the variability of their status is expressed in the fact that some of them can be used in an isolated response position (for instance, words of 3 Arnold I.V., The English Word, M.,1973,379p. 10 affirmation and negation, interrogative words, demonstrative words, etc.), while others cannot (such as prepositions or conjunctions). The nature of the element of any system is revealed in the character of its function. The function of words is realised in their nominative correlation with one another. On the basis of this correlation a number of functional words are distinguished by the "negative delimitation" (i.e. delimitation as a residue after the identification of the co-positional textual elements), e.g.-. the/people; to/speak; by/way/of. The "negative delimitation'' immediately connects these functional words with the directly nominative, notional words in the system. Thus, the correlation in question (which is to be implied by the conventional term "nominative function") unites functional words with notional words, or "half-words" (word-morphemes) with "full words". On the other hand, nominative correlation reduces the morpheme as a type of segmental signee to the role of an element in the composition of the word.4 As we see, if the elementary character (indivisibility) of the morpheme (as a significative unit) is established in the structure of words, the elementary character of the word (as a nominative unit) is realized in the system of lexicon. Summing up what has been said in this paragraph, we may point out some of the properties of the morpheme and the word which are fundamental from the point of view of their systemic status and therefore require detailed investigations and descriptions. The morpheme is a meaningful segmental component of the word; the morpheme is formed by phonemes; as a meaningful component of the word it is elementary (i.e. indivisible into smaller segments as regards its significative function). The word is a nominative unit of language; it is formed by morphemes; it enters the lexicon of language as its elementary component (i.e. a component indivisible 4 Arbekova T.I "English lexicology" M, 1977 p.243 11 into smaller segments as regards its nominative function); together with other nominative units the word is used for the formation of the sentence — a unit of information in the communication process. In traditional grammar the study of the morphemic structure of the word was conducted in the light of the two basic criteria: positional (the location of the marginal morphemes in relation to the central ones) and semantic or functional (the correlative contribution of the morphemes to the general meaning of the word). The combination of these two criteria in an integral description has led to the rational classification of morphemes that is widely used both in research linguistic work and in practical lingual tuition. In accord with the traditional classification, morphemes on the upper level are divided into root-morphemes (roots) and affixal morphemes (affixes). The roots express the concrete, "material" part of the meaning of the word, while the affixes express the specification part of the meaning of the word, the specifications being of lexico-semantic and grammatical-semantic character. The roots of notional words are classical lexical morphemes. The affixal morphemes include prefixes, suffixes, and inflexions (in the tradition of the English school grammatical inflexions are commonly referred to as "suffixes"). Of these, prefixes and lexical suffixes have word-building functions, together with the root they form the stem of the word; inflexions (grammatical suffixes) express different morphological categories. The root, according to the positional content of the term (i.e. the border-area between prefixes and suffixes), is obligatory for any word, while affixes are not obligatory. Therefore one and the same morphemic segment of functional (i.e. non-notional) status, depending on various morphemic environments, can in principle be used now as an affix (mostly, a prefix), now as a root. Cf.: out — a root-word (preposition, adverb, verbal postposition, adjective, noun, verb); throughout — a composite word, in which -out serves as one of the roots (the categorial status of the meaning of both morphemes is the same); outing — a two-morpheme word, in which out is a root, and -ing is a suffix; outlook, 12 outline, outrage, out-talk, etc. — words, in which out- serves as a prefix; look-out, knock-out, shut-out, time-out, etc. — words (nouns), in which -out serves as a suffix. The morphemic composition of modern English words has a wide range of varieties; in the lexicon of everyday speech the preferable morphemic types of stems are root-stems (one-root stems or two-root stems) and one-affix stems. With grammatically changeable words, these stems take one grammatical suffix {two "open" grammatical suffixes are used only with some plural nouns in the possessive case, cf.: the children's toys, the oxen's yokes). Thus, the abstract complete morphemic model of the common English word is the following: prefix + root + lexical suffix+grammatical suffix. The syntagmatic connections of the morphemes within the model form two types of hierarchical structure. The first is characterized by the original prefixal stem (e.g. prefabricated), the second is characterized by the original suffixal stem (e.g. inheritors). If we use the symbols St for stem, R for root, Pr for prefix, L for lexical suffix, Gr for grammatical suffix, and, besides, employ three graphical symbols of hierarchical grouping — braces, brackets, and parentheses, then the two morphemic word-structures can be presented as follows: W1 = {[Pr + (R + L)] +Gr}; W2 = {[(Pr + R) +L] + Gr} In the morphemic composition of more complicated words these modeltypes form different combinations. Further insights into the correlation between the formal and functional aspects of morphemes within the composition of the word may be gained in the light of the so-called "allo-emic" theory put forward by Descriptive Linguistics and broadly used in the current linguistic research.5 In accord with this theory, lingual units are described by means of two types of terms: allo-terms and eme-terms. Eme-terms denote the generalized invariant units of language characterized by a certain functional status: phonemes, 5 Arnold D. "The English word" M, 1973. p. 299 13 morphemes. Allo-terms denote the concrete manifestations, or variants of the generalized units dependent on the regular co-location with other elements of language: allophones, allomorphs. A set of iso-functional allo-units identified in the text on the basis of their co-occurrence with other lingual units (distribution) is considered as the corresponding eme-unit with its fixed systemic status. The allo-emic identification of lingual elements is achieved by means of the so-called "distributional analysis". The immediate aim of the distributional analysis is to fix and study the units of language in relation to their textual environments, i.e. the adjoining elements in the text. The environment of a unit may be either "right" or "left", e.g.: un-pardonable. In this word the left environment of the root is the negative prefix un-, the right environment of the root is the qualitative suffix -able. Respectively, the root pardon- is the right environment for the prefix, and the left environment for the suffix. The distribution of a unit may be defined as the total of all its environments; in other words, the distribution of a unit is its environment in generalized terms of classes or categories. In the distributional analysis on the morphemic level, phonemic distribution of morphemes and morphemic distribution of morphemes are discriminated. The study is conducted in two stages. At the first stage, the analysed text (i.e. the collected lingual materials, or "corpus") is divided into recurrent segments consisting of phonemes. These segments are called "morphs", i.e. morphemic units distributionally uncharacterized, e.g.: the/boat/s/were/gain/ing/speed. At the second stage, the environmental features of the morphs are established and the corresponding identifications are effected. Three main types of distribution are discriminated in the distributional analysis, namely, contrastive distribution, non-contrastive distribution, and complementary distribution. Contrastive and non-contrastive distributions concern identical environments of different morphs. The morphs are said to be in contrastive 14 distribution if their meanings (functions) are different. Such morphs constitute different morphemes. Cf. the suffixes -(e)d and -ing in the verb-forms returned, returning. The morphs are said to be in non-contrastive distribution (or free alternation) if their meaning (function) is the same. Such morphs constitute "free alternants", or "free variants" of the same morpheme. Cf. the suffixes -(e)d and -t in the verb-forms learned, learnt. As different from the above, complementary distribution concerns different environments of formally different morphs which are united by the same meaning (function). If two or more morphs have the same meaning and the difference in (heir form is explained by different environments, these morphs are said to be in complementary distribution and considered the allomorphs of the same morpheme. Cf. the allomorphs of the plural morpheme /-s/, /-z/, /-iz/ which stand in phonemic complementary distribution; the plural allomorph -en in oxen, children, which stands in morphemic complementary distribution with the other allomorphs of the plural morpheme. As we see, for analytical purposes the notion of complementary distribution is the most important, because it helps establish the identity of outwardly altogether different elements of language, in particular, its grammatical elements. As a result of the application of distributional analysis to the morphemic level, different types of morphemes have been discriminated which can be called the "distributional morpheme types". It must be stressed that the distributional classification of morphemes cannot abolish or in any way depreciate the traditional morpheme types. Rather, it supplements the traditional classification, showing some essential features of morphemes on the principles of environmental study. We shall survey the distributional morpheme types arranging them in pairs of immediate correlation. On the basis of the degree of self-dependence, "free" morphemes and "bound" morphemes are distinguished. Bound morphemes cannot form words by themselves, they are identified only as component segmental parts of words. As 15 different from this, free morphemes can build up words by themselves, i.e. can be used "freely".6 For instance, in the word handful the root hand is a free morpheme, while the suffix -ful is a bound morpheme. There are very few productive bound morphemes in the morphological system of English. Being extremely narrow, the list of them is complicated by the relations of homonymy. These morphemes are the following: 1) the segments -(e)s [-z, -s, -iz]: the plural of nouns, the possessive case of nouns, the third person singular present of verbs; the segments -(e)d [-d, -t, -id]: the past and past participle of verbs; the segments -ing: the gerund and present participle; the segments -er, -est: the comparative and superlative degrees of adjectives and adverbs. The auxiliary word-morphemes of various standings should be interpreted in this connection as "semi-bound" morphemes, since, being used as separate elements of speech strings, they form categorial unities with their notional stemwords. On the basis of formal presentation, "overt" morphemes and "covert" morphemes are distinguished. Overt morphemes are genuine, explicit morphemes building up words; the covert morpheme is identified as a contrastive absence of morpheme expressing a certain function. The notion of covert morpheme coincides with the notion of zero morpheme in the oppositional description of grammatical categories (see further). For instance, the word-form clocks consists of two overt morphemes: one lexical (root) and one grammatical expressing the plural. The outwardly onemorpheme word-form clock, since it expresses the singular, is also considered as consisting of two morphemes, i.e. of the overt root and the co\ert (implicit) grammatical suffix of the singular. The usual symbol for the covert morpheme employed by linguists is the sign of the empty set: 6 Arnold D. "The English word" M, 1973. p. 299 16 On the basis of segmental relation, "segmental" morphemes and "suprasegmental" morphemes are distinguished. Interpreted as supra-segmental morphemes in distributional terms are intonation contours, accents, pauses. The said elements of language, as we have stated elsewhere, should beyond dispute be considered signemic units of language, since they are functionally bound. They form the secondary line of speech, accompanying its primary phonemic line (phonemic complexes). On the other hand, from what has been stated about the morpheme proper, it is not difficult to see that the morphemic interpretation of suprasegmental units can hardly stand to reason. Indeed, these units are functionally connected not with morphemes, but with larger elements of language: words, word-groups, sentences, supra-sentential constructions. On the basis of grammatical alternation, "additive" morphemes and "replacive" morphemes are distinguished. Interpreted as additive morphemes are outer grammatical suffixes, since, as a rule, they are opposed to the absence of morphemes in grammatical alternation. Cf. look+ed; small+er, etc. In distinction to these, the root phonemes of grammatical interchange are considered as replacive morphemes, since they replace one another in the paradigmatic forms. Cf. dr-i-ve — dr-o-ve — dr-i-ven; m-a-n — m-e-n; etc. It should be remembered that the phonemic interchange is utterly unproductive in English as in all the Indo-European languages. If it were productive, it might rationally be interpreted as a sort of replacive "infixation" (correlated with "exfixation" of the additive type). As it stands, however, this type of grammatical means can be understood as a kind of suppletivity (i.e. partial suppletivity). On the basis of linear characteristic, "continuous" (or "linear") morphemes and "discontinuous" morphemes are distinguished. By the discontinuous morpheme, opposed to the common, i.e. uninterruptedly expressed, continuous morpheme, a two-element grammatical unit is meant which is identified in the analytical grammatical form comprising an 17 auxiliary word and a grammatical suffix7. These two elements, as it were, embed the notional stem; hence, they are symbolically represented as follows: be ... ing — for the continuous verb forms (e.g. is going); have ... en — for the perfect verb forms (e.g. has gone); be ... en — for the passive verb forms (e.g. is taken). It is easy to see that the notion of morpheme applied to the analytical form of the word violates the principle of the identification of morpheme as an elementary meaningful segment: the analytical "framing" consists of two meaningful segments, i.e. of two different morphemes. On the other hand, the general notion "discontinuous constituent", "discontinuous unit" is quite rational and can be helpfully used in linguistic description in its proper place. 1.2. The problem of notional and formal words In giving a list of parts of speech, we have not so far mentioned the terms "notional" and "formal". It is time now to turn to this question. According to the view held by some grammarians, 2 words should be divided into two categories on the following principle: some words denote things, actions, and other extralinguistic phenomena (these, then, would be notional words), whereas other words denote relations and connections between the notional words, and thus have no direct bearing on anything extralinguistic (these, then, would be the formal words, or form words). Authors holding this view define prepositions as words denoting relations between words (or between parts of a sentence), and conjunctions as words connecting words or sentences. However, this view appears to be very shaky. Actually, the so-called formal words also express something extralinguistic. For instance, prepositions express relations between things. Cf., e. g., The letter is on the table and The letter is in the table: two different relations between the two objects, the letter 7 D.Cryslal, The English Language, New York,1998,421p. 18 and the table, are denoted by the prepositions. In a similar way, conjunctions denote connections between extralinguistic things and phenomena. Thus, in the sentence The match was postponed because it was raining the conjunction because denotes the causal connection between two processes, which of course exists whether we choose to express it by words or not. In the sentence It was raining but the match took place all the same the conjunction but expresses a contradiction between two phenomena, the rain and the match, which exists in reality whether we mention it or not. It follows that the prepositions on and in, the conjunctions because and but express some relations and connections existing independently of language, and thus have as close a connection with the extralinguistic world as any noun or verb. They are, in so far, no less notional than nouns or verbs. Now, the term "formal word" would seem to imply that the word thus denoted has some function in building up a phrase or a sentence. This function is certainly performed by both prepositions and conjunctions and from this point of view prepositions and conjunctions should indeed be singled out. But this definition of a formal word cannot be applied to particles. A particle does not do anything in the way of connecting words or building a phrase or a sentence. There does not therefore seem to be any reason for classing particles with formal words. If this view is endorsed we shall only have two parts of speech which are form words, viz. prepositions and conjunctions. 1 It should also be observed that some words belonging to a particular part of speech may occasionally, or even permanently, perform a function differing from that which characterises the part of speech as a whole. Auxiliary verbs are a case in point. In the sentence I have some money left the verb have performs the function of the predicate, which is the usual function of a verb in a sentence, In this case, then, the function of the verb have is precisely the one typical of verbs as a class. However, in the sentence I have found my briefcase the verb have is an auxiliary: it is a means of forming a 19 certain analytical form of the verb find. It does not by itself perform the function of a predicate. We need not assume on that account that there are two verbs have, one notional and the other auxiliary. It is the same verb have, but its functions in the two sentences are different. If we take the verb shall, we see that its usual function is that of forming the future tense of another verb, e. g. I shall know about it to-morrow. Shall is then said to be an auxiliary verb, and its function differs from that of the verb as a part of speech, but it is a verb all the same. After this general survey of parts of speech we will now turn to a systematic review of each part of speech separately. 1.3. The principle of grouping the words into grammatical classes The words of language, depending on various formal and semantic features are divided into grammatically relevant sets or classes. The traditional grammatical classes of words are called “parts of speech” since the words are distinguished not only by grammatical, but also by semantico-lexemic properties, some scholars refer to parts of speech as “lexico-grammatical categories”. It should be noted that the term “parts of speech” is purely traditional and conventional, it can not be taken as in any way defining or explanatory. This name was introduced in the grammatical teaching of Ancient Greece, where the concept of the sentence was not yet explicity indentified in distinction to the general idea of speech, and where, consequently, no strict differentiation was drawn between the word as a vocabulary unit and the word as functional elements of the sentence. In modern linguistic parts of speech are discriminated on the basis of the three criteria: a”semantic”, “formal”, and “functional”. 20 The semantic criterion presupposes the evaluation of the generalized meaning, which is characteristic of all the subsets of words constituting a given part of speech. This meaning is understood as the “categorical meaning of the parts of speech”. T he formal criterion provides for the exposition of the specific inflextional and derivational (word building) features of all the lexemic subsets of a part of speech. The functional criterion concerns the syntactic role of the words in the sentences typical of a part of speech. The said three factors of categorical characterization of words are conventionally referred to as respectively,” meaning”, “form”, and “function”. In accord with the described criteria, words on the upper level of classification are divided into national and functional, which reflects their division in the earlier grammatical tradition into changeable and unchangeable. To the national parts of speech of the English language belong noun, the adjective, the numeral, the pronoun, the verb, the adverb. The features of the noun within the identification triad “meaning – form - function” are, correspondingly, the following: 1) the categorical meaning of substance (“thinness”); 2) the changeable forms of number and case; the specific suffixal forms of derivation (prefixes in English do not discriminate parts of speech as such); 3) the substantive functions in the sentence (subject, object, substantive predicative); prepositional connections; modification by an adjective. The features of the adjective: 1) the categorical meaning of property (qualitative and relative); 2) the forms of the degrees comparison (for qualitative adjectives); the specific suffixal forms of derivation; 3) adjectival functional in the sentence (attribute to a noun, adjectival predicative). The features of the numeral: 1) the categorial meaning of number (cardinal and ordinal); 2) the narrow set of simple numerals; the specific forms of composition for compound numerals; the specific suffixal forms of derivation for ordinal numerals; 3) the functions of numerical attribute and numerical substantive. The features of the pronoun: 1) the categorical meaning of indication (deixis); 2) the narrow sets of various status with the corresponding 21 formal properties of categorical changeability and word – building; 3) the substantial and adjectival functions for in the sentence (attribute to a noun, adjectival predicative). The features of the numeral: 1) the categorial meaning of number (cardinal and ordinal); 2) the narrow set of simple numerals; the specific forms of composition for compound numerals; the specific suffixal forms of derivation for ordinal numerals; 3) the functions of numerical attribute and numerical substantive. The features of the pronoun; 1) the categorial meaning of indication (deixis); 2) the narrow sets of various status with the corresponding formal properties of categorial changeability and word – building; 3) the substantival and adjectival functions for different sets. The features of the verb; 1) the categorial meaning of process (presented in the two upper series of forms pespectively, as finite process and non – finite process) 2) the forms of the verbal categories of person, number, tense, aspect, voice, mood; the opposition of the finite and non finite forms; 3) the function of the finite predicate for the finite verb; the mixed verbal – other than verbal functions for the non finite verb. The features of the adverb: 1) the categorial meaning of the secondary property, i.e. the property of process or an other property; 2) the forms of the degrees of comparison for qualitative adverbs; the specific suffixal forms of derivation; 3) the functions of various of adverbial modifiers. We have surveyed the indentifying properties of the national parts of speech that unite the words of complete nominative meaning characterized by self – dependent functions in the sentence. Contrasted against the national arts of speech are words of incomplete nominative meaning and non – self – dependent, mediatory functions in the sentence, these are functional parts of speech. On the principle of “generalized form” only unchangeable words are traditionally treated under the heading of functional parts of speech. As for their individual forms as such, they are simply presented by the list, since the number 22 of these words is limited, so that they needn’t be identified on any general, operational scheme. To the basing functional series of words in English belong the article the preposition, the conjunction, the particle, the modal word, the intexiection. The article expresses the specific limitation of the substantive functions. The preposition expresses the dependencies and interdependencies of substantive referents. The conjunction expresses connections of phenomena. The particle unites the functional words of specifying and limiting meaning. To this series, alongside of other specifying words, should be referred verbal post positions as functional modifiers of verb, etc. The modal word, occupying in the sentence a more pronounced or less pronounced detached position, expresses the attitude of the sparer to the reflected situation and its parts. Here belong the functional words of probability (probably, perhaps, etc) of qualitative evaluation (fortunately, unfortunately, luckily, etc), and also of affirmation and negation. The interjection, occupying a detached position in the sentence, as a signal of emotions. Each part of speech after its identification is further subdivided into subseries in accord with various particular semantico–functional and formal features of the constituent words. This subdivision is some times called “subcategorization “of parts of speech. Thus, nouns are subcategorized into proper and common, animate and inanimate, countable and uncountable, concrete and abstract, etc. Coin / coins , floor / floors , kind / kinds –news , growth ,water , furniture ; stone , grain , must , leaf –honesty , love , slavery , darkness. Verbs are subcategorized into fully predicative and partially predicative, transitive and intransitive, actional and statal, factive and evaluative etc. walk, put, 23 speak, listen, see, give-live, float, stay, ache, ripen, rain: sail, prepare, shine, blowcan, may, shall, be, become; write, play strike boil, receive, ride-exist, sleep, rest, thrive, revel, suffex. Adjectives are subcategorized into qualitative and relative, of contant feature and temporary feature (the latter are referred to as “statives” and indentified by some scholars as a separate part of speech under the heading of “category of state”), factive and evaluative, etc. Long, red, lovely, noble, comfortable-wooden, rural daily, subterranean, orthographical; tall, heavy, smooth, mental, native-kind, brave, wonderful, wise, stupid. The adverb, the numeral, the pronoun are also subject, to the corresponding subcategorizations. We have drawn a general outline of the division of the lexicon into part of speech classes developed by modern linguistic on the lines of traditional morphology. It is known that the distribution of words between different part of speech may to a certain extent differ with different authors. This fact gives cause to come linguists for calling in question the rational characteristic of the part of speech classification as whole, gives theme cause for accusing it of being subjective or “prescientific” in essence. Such nihilistic criticism, however, should be rejected as utterly ungrounded. Indeed, considering the part of speech classification on its merits, one must clearly realize that what is above all important about it is the fundamental principles of word class identification, and not occasional enlargementsor diminutions of the established groups, or re – distributions of individual words due to re – considerations of their subcategorial features. The very idea of subcategorization as the obligatory second stage of the undertaken classification testifies to the objective nature of thus kind of analysis. 24 For instance propositions and conjunctions can be combined into one united series of “connectives”, since the function of both is just to connect national components of the sentence. In this case, on the second stage of classification, the enlarged word – class of connectives will be subdivided into two main subclasses namely, prepositional connectives and conjunctional connectives. Likewise, the articles can be included as a subset into the more general set of particles-specifics. As is known, noun and adjectives, as well as description under one common class-term “names”: originally, in the Ancient Greek grammatical teaching they were not different cited because they had the some forms of morphological change (declension). On the other hand, in various descriptions of English grammar such narrow lexemic sets as the two words yes and no, the pronominal determiners of nouns, even the one anticipating pronoun it are given a separate class- items status- though in no way challenging or distarting the functional character of the treated units. It should be remembered that modern principles of part of speech identification have been formulated as a result of painstaking research conducted on the vast materials of numerous languages: and it is in Soviet linguistic that the three- criteria characterization of parts of speech has been developed and applied to practice with the utmost consist ency. The three celebrated names are especially notable for the elaboration of these criteria, namely, V.V.Vinogradov in connection with his study of Russian grammar, A.I.Simirnitsky and B.A.Ilyish in connection with their study of English grammar. Alongside of the three-criteria principle of dividing the words into grammatical (lexico-grammatical) classes modern linguistics has developed another, narrower principle of word-class indentification based on syntactic featuring of words only. The fact is, that the three-children principle faces a special difficulty in determining the part of speech status of such lexemes as have morphological 25 characteristics of national words, by their plating the role of grammatical mediators in phrases and sentence. Here belong, for equivalents-suppletive fillers, auxiliary verbs, aspect verbs, intensifying adverbs determiner pronouns. This difficulty, consisting in the resection of heterogeneous properties in the established word-classes, can evident is over come by recognizing only one criterion of the three as decisive. Worthy of note is that in the original Ancient Greek grammatical teaching which put forward the first outline of the part of speech theory, the division of words into grammatical classes was also based on one determining criterion only, namely, on the formal-morphological featuring. It means that any given word under analysis was turned into a classified lexeme on the principle of its relation to grammatical change. In conditional of the primary acquisition of linguistic knowledge, and in connection with the study of a highly inflexional language this characteristic proved quite efficient. Still at the present stage of the development of linguistic science, syntactic characterization of words that has been made possible after the exposition of their fundamental morphological properties is far more important and universal from the point of view of the general classification requirements. This characterization is more important because is shows the distribution of words between different sets in accord with their functional destination. The role or morphological, by this presentation is not underrated, rather it is further clarified from the point of view of exposing connection between the categoria composition of the word and its sentence forming relevance. This characterization is more universal, because it is not specially destined for the inflexional aspect of language and hence is equally applicable to languages of various morphological types. 26 1.3. The syntactic-distributional classification of words The syntactic- distributional classification of words is based on the study of their combinability by means of substitution testing. The testing results in developing the standard model of four main “positions” of notional words in the English sentence: those of the noun (N), verb(V), adjective(A), adverb(D). Pronouns are include into the corresponding positional classes as their substitutes. Words standing outside the “positions” in the sentence are treated as functional words of various syntactic values. Here is how CH.Fries presents his scheme of English word classes. For his materials he chooses tape recorded spontaneous conversation comprising about 250,000 word intries (50 hours of talk). The words isolated from this corpus are tested on the three typical sentences (that are isolated from the records, too) and used as substitution test frames: A) the concert was good (always); B) the clerk remembered the tax; C) the team went there. The parenthesized positions are optional from the point of view of the structural completion of sentence. As a result of successive substitution tests on the cited “frames” the following lists of positional words (“form words”), or (“parts of speech”) are established: Class 1(A) concert, coffee, taste, container difference etc (B) clerk husband, supervisor, etc; tax, food, coffee, etc.(C)team, husband, woman, etc. 27 Class 2(A) was, seemed, became, etc. (B) remembered, wanted, saw, suggested, etc. (C) went, came, ran,… lived, worked, etc. Class 3(A) good, large, necessary, foreign, new empty etc. Class 4(A) there, here, always, then, sometimes etc (B) clearly, sufficiently, especially, repeatedly, soon, etc. (C) the beck, out, etc. All these words can fill in the positions of the frames without affecting their general structural meaning (such as “thing and its quality ata given time” – their first frame; actor- action- thing acted upon –characteristic of the action” the second frame; “action- derection –of – the action”-the third frame). Repeated interchanges in the substitution of the primarily identified positional (I, e, notional) words in different collocation determine their morphological characteristics I, e, characteristics offering, them to various subclasses of the identified lexemic classes. Functional words (function words) are exposed in the cited process of testing as being unable to fill in the position of the frames without destroying their structural meaning. These words form limited groups totaling 154units. The identified groups of functional words can be distributed among the three main sets. The words of the most set as specifiers of notional words. Here belong determiners of nouns, modal verbs serving as specifiers of notional verbs, functional modifiers and intensifiers of adjectives and adverbs. The words of the seconds set play the role of interpositional elements, determining the relation of notional words to one another. Here belong prepositions and conjunctions. The words of the third set refer to the sentence as a whole. Such are question- words (what, how, etc), inducement words (lets, please, etc) attention- getting words, 28 words of affirmation and negation, sentence introducers (it, there) and some others. Comparing the syntactico-distributional classification words with the traditional part of speech division of words, one cannot but see the similarity of the general schemes of the twoo: the four absolutely cardinal classes of notional words (since numerals and pronouns have no positional functions of their own and serve as pronominal and pro-adjectival elements) the interpretation of functional words as syntactic mediators and their formal representation by the list. However, under these unquestionable traits of similarity are distinctly revealed essential features of difference, the proper evaluation of which allows us to make some important generalization about the structure of the lexemic system of language. 29 2.0. CHAPTER II. Contextual-semantics of Functional words in the English language 2.3 Type of grammatical meaning of parts of speech used in P.Abraham’s “The path of thunder” Every language contains thousands upon thousands of lexemes. When describing them it is possible either to analyses every lexeme separately or to unite theme into classes with more or less common features. Linguistic make use of both approaches. A dictionary usually describes individual lexemes, a grammar book mostly deals with classes of lexemes traditionally called parts of speech. Though grammarians have been studying parts of speech for over two thousands years, the criteria used for classifying lexemes are not yet agreed upon. Hence there is a good deal of subjectivity in defining the classes of lexemes and we consequently, find different classifications. Still parts of speech are not altogether an invention of grammarians: what really lies at the bottom of this division of material reality. The bulk of the class denoting substances is made up of words denoting material objects such as table, window, milk etc. the vernal of the class of lexemes meaning processes is constituted by lexemes denoting concrete actions, such as those writing, reading, speaking, etc. The lexemes of a part of speech are first of all united by their content, i, e, by their meaning. Now, this general meaning of a part of speech cannot be grammatical because the members of one lexeme have different grammatical meanings: boy’s (singular number, possessive case) boys (plural common case). Nevertheless, the meaning of a part of speech is closely connected with certain typical grammatical meanings. The general meaning of part of speech cannot be lexical. If all the words of part of speech had the same lexical meaning, they would constitute one lexeme. 30 But the meaning of part of speech is closely connected with the lexical meanings of its constituent lexemes. It is always an abstraction from those meanings. Lexemes united by the general lexicon-grammatical meaning of “substance” are called nouns. Those having the general lexicon-grammatical meaning of “action” are called verbs, etc., etc The definition “substance”, “action”, “quality” are conventional. It is easy to see the notion of “substance” in nouns like water or steel. But a certain stretch of imagination is necessary to discern the “substance” in nouns like hatred silence, (a) swim, or the “action” in the verbs belong, resemble, contain and the like. The general lexicon-grammatical meaning is the intrinsic property of a part of speech. Connected with it are some properties that find, so to say, outward expression. Lexicon-grammatical morphemes are once of these properties. The stems of nouns lexemes often include the morphemes –er, -ist, -ness, -ship, -ment (worker, Marxist firmness, friendship, management). The stems of verb lexemes includes the morphemes -ize, -iffy, -be, -en, -en (industrialize, electrify, becloud, enrich, darken). Adjective stems stems often have the suffixes,-full, -ish, -oust, ive (careful, fearless, boyish, continuous, evasive) . Thus the presence of a certain lexicon-grammatical morpheme in the stem of a lexeme- often stamps it as belonging: to a definite part of speech. Many of these morphemes are regularly used to from lexemes of one class from those all other class. For instance, the suffix –ness often forms noun stems from adjective stems. Dark-darkness, sweetsweetness, thick-thickness, full-fullness, etc. the absence of the suffix in dark as contrasted with –ness of darkness looks like a zero morpheme characterizing dark as on adjective. Other stem-building elements are of comparatively little significance as distinctive features of parts of speech. For example: A slow steady movement that seemed to be independent. 31 Stem structure is of little help too, because there are stems of various kinds within almost every part of speech: simple (snow, know, now, down), derivative (belief, believe below, before), compound (get up, at all, one hundred and twenty, in order to). Certainly English nouns have many more compound stems than other parts of speech, and composite stems are most typical of the English verb. But this as a case for statistics. As a classification criterion it is of little use. A part of speech is characterized by its grammatical categories manifested in the opossums and paradigms of its lexemes. Nouns have the categories of number and case. Verbs possess the categories of tense, voice, mood, etc. Adjectives have the category of the degrees of comparison. That is why then paradigms of lexemes belonging to different parts of speech are different. The paradigms of a verb lexemes is long: write, writes, wrote, shall write, will write, am writing, is writing, was writing, were writing, etc. The paradigm of a noun lexeme is much shorter: sister, sisters. The paradigm of an adjective lexeme is still shorter: cold, colder, coldest. The paradigm of an adverb like always, is the shortest as the lexeme consists of one word. It must be borne in mind, however, that not all the lexemes of a part of speech have the same paradigms. Cf. 1. Student book information. The first lexeme has opossums of two grammatical categories: number and case. The second lexeme has only one oppose me – that of number. It has no case opossum. In other words, it is outside the both categories: it has opossums at all. We may say that the number oppose me with its opposite grammatical meanings of “singularity” and “plurality” is neutralized. 32 In nouns like information, bread, milk, etc. owing to their lexical meanings which can hardly be associated with the notions of “oneness” or “more- than oneness” (cf. the uncommonness of “two milks” three information etc). Sometimes only the form of an opossum is neutralized in certain surroundings. Ex: Lanny knew that all he had to do was to lower his eyes or look awayany gesture of defeat would have done-and the man would tell him to go. We may define neutralization as the reduction of an oppose me to one of its members under certain circumstances. This member may be called the member of neutralization. Usually it is the unmarked member of oppose me. In number opossums, for instance, the member of neutralization is mostly the unmarked “singular”. However, sometimes the marked “plural” because the member of neutralization, as in the case of trousers, tongs, sweets, etc The category of number is by no means an exception as regards the neutralization of its opossums. We may recognize the neutralization of the case opossums in nouns like book, hand, thought, etc of the category of degrees of comparison in adjectives like deaf, blind, wooden, etc. of the category of aspect in verbs like to believe, to resemble, etc. Ex: A spasm of trembling shot through his body and he became conscious of the fact that he was breathing hard. But three are no grounds to speak of the neutralization of the gender oppose me in the adjective blind (cf.слоеной- слоеная -слоеной) because no adjective lexemes have gender opossums in English. The influence of the category of number is obliquely felt even in a case like milk. The wood milk is closer to the “singular” member it has no positive than to the “plural” one. 33 Ex: And here I am, Lanny thought, fighting the same battle in the twentieth century. Thus, the word milk can be said to have an oblique “singular” meaning. It is oblique because it is acquired not as a result of direct opposition, but through association and analogy with words having “plural” opposites. Similarly book can be said to have an oblique common case meaning by analogy with words like boy, cook which have an actually meaning of “common case” owing to the opossums boy-boy’s, cook- cook’s. Likewise the verbs creeps, comes have an oblique meaning of “active voice” by analogy with the first members in such opossums as keeps –is kept, makes-is made.Oblique grammatical meanings can also be regarded as potential meanings that can be actualized if necessary. Ordinarily the word room, for instance, has but an oblique meaning of common case with no possessive case opposite, but Galsworthy uses the room’s atmosphere. We find the same actualization of a potential number meaning in there was no room for the separate bitterness. The actualization of potential “voice” meaning is observed in a sentence like the bed had not been slept. Taking into consideration that oblique grammatical meanings unite numbers of lexemes into more or less homogeneous groups, we may also treat them as lexicon- grammatical meanings for example, nouns like, milk, water, steel, selfpossession are united by the oblique meaning of singular number into one lexicongrammatical group of uncountable. Now coming back to the nouns student book information we can say that all of them have the meanings of singular number and common case. Only in the noun book the case meaning and in the noun information both of them are oblique or potential, or lexica-grammatical ones. 34 Another important feature of a part of speech is its combinability i.e. the ability to form certain combination of words. As stated, we distinguish lexical grammatical and lexica- grammatical combinability. When speaking of the combinability of parts of speech, lexica- grammatical meanings are to be considered first. In this sense combinability is the power of a lexica-grammatical class of words to form combinations of definite patterns with words of certain classes irrespective of their lexical or grammatical meanings. Owing to the lexica-grammatical meanings of nouns (“substance”) and preposition (“relation (of substances)”) these two parts of speech often go together in speech. The model to (from, at) school characterizes both nouns and prepositions as distinct from adverbs which do not usually form combination of the types “to loudly”, form loudly. The same is true about articles(a book, the book but not a below the speak), adjectives (pleasant silence but not pleasant silently), etc. As already mentioned, a characteristic feature of articles is their unilateral right-hand combinability with nouns .Unilateral right-hand connection, but with different classes of words, are also typical of particles (even, john, even yesterday, even beautiful). Bilateral connection is typical of conjunctions and prepositions. The connection of nouns and verbs in speech are variable, but right-hand connections are more numerous with verbs. Ex: The train hooted shrilly and slowly jogged out of the siding. On its way to Bloemfontein, and then Johanesburg, and then farther north. Thus the combinability of a word, its connections in speech help to show to what part of speech it belongs. The impossibility of forming combinations with certain classes of lexemes may serve as valuable negative criteria in the classification of lexemes. Thus the 35 fact that the adjective can form no combinations of the preposition + adjective pattern or are verbs cannot attach an article help to distinguish them from other parts of speech. All this and the desire to avoid, as for as possible the confusion of the two basic units of grammar the word and the sentence, must necessary reduce the role of the sentence criterion in defining part of speech. This is why we play it last, though some linguists. Give it the first place sentence. A noun is mostly used as a subject or an object, a verb usually functions as a predicate, an adjective- as an attribute, etc. Thus a part of speech is a class of lexemes characterized by 1) its lexicagrammatical meaning, 2) its lexica-grammatical morphemes (stem-build elements), 3) its grammatical categories or its paradigms, 4) its combinability and 5) its functions in a sentence. All these features distinguish, for instance, the lexeme represented by the word teacher from that represented by the word teacher and stamp the words of the first lexeme is nouns, those of the other lexeme as verbs. But very often or even parts of speech lack some of these features. The noun lexeme information lacks feature3. The adjective lexeme deaf lacks both feature 2 and feature 3. So do the adverbs back seldom, very, the prepositions with of at, etc. Feature 1, 4 and 5 are the most general properties of parts of speech. Many linguistics point out the difference between such pars of speech as say, nouns or verb, on the one hand, and preposition or conjunctions, on the other. V.V.Vingradov thinks that only noun, the adjective, the pronoun, the numeral, the verb, the adverb, and the category of site in the Russian language may be considered parts of speech, as these words “can fulfill naming function or 36 be indicative equivalents of names”8.Besides parts of speech V.V.Vinagradov distinguishes 4 particles of speech: 1) particles proper, 2)linking particles, 3) preposition, 4) conjunctions. Ex: Celia was pretty and a good companion. One many infer that particles of speech are denied the naming function, to which we object. There is certainly same difference between the nature of such words as table and often. One names an object, the other – a relation. But both “can fulfill the naming function”. Nouns like relation, attitude, verbs like belong, refer name relation too, but in a always peculiar to these parts of speech. Preposition and conjunctions name the relation of the word of reality in their own way. E. Nita makes no distinction between nouns and prepositions as to their naming function when he writes that words such as boy, fish, ken, walk, and good, bad, against and with are signal for various objects, qualities, processes, states and relationships of natural and cultural phenomena9. H. Sweet distinguishes full words and empty words. Producing the sentence: The earth is round, he writes: “we call such words as the and is fromwords because they are words in from only”10 Our opinion is that both the and are words in content as well as in form. The impossibility of substituting an for the in the sentence above is due to the content, not the form of an. When replacing is by another link verb (seems, looks) we change the content of the sentence. Many authors speak of function words D. Brown, O. Baily11 call “auxiliarly verbs prepositions and articles” function words. Vzhigadlo, I.Ivanoiva, L lofic12 B.B.BНаградов Русский язык. М. 1997,p.p41-44 B.B.BНаградов Русский язык. М. 1947 p.p4144 10 E.A Nita Morphology. Ann Arbor 1946 p 138 8 9 37 name prepositions conjunctions, particles and articles as functional parts of speech distinct from notional parts of speech. C. Fries13 points out 4. classes of words called part of speech and 15 groups of words called functional words. The demarcation line between function words and all other words is not words and all other words is not very clear. Now it passes between parts of speech, now it is down inside a parts of speech. Alongside of preposition , auxiliary verbs are mentioned. Alongside of functional parts of speech, grammarians speak of the functional use of certain classes of words for instance verbs14 The criteria for singling out function words are rather vague. After enumerating some of separating the words of these 15 groups from the other and for calling them function words is the fact that in order to res to certain structure signals one must know these words as items. And again: There are no formal contrasts by which we can ineptly the words of these lists. They must be remembered as items15. The difference between the function words and the other is not so much a matter of form as of content. The lexical meanings of function words are not so bright, distinct, tangible as these of other words. If most words of a language are notional, function words may be called semi – notionally. As to form, a semi - notional words may coincide with a notional one. Take, for example the form grows in the two sentences: He grows in the two old. The first grows expresses an action. What does he do? He grows roses. In the second case the notion of action is very weak. He grows old can make but a facetious answer to what does he do? The linking function of grows comes to the fore. 11 Form in Modern English NY,1958 Op cit.., p16 13 The structure of English. London 1961 p 160 14 B.Жигало and others, op cit.., p 89-90 15 E.U.Шендельс “Иностранные языки” 12 38 Grows links a world indicating a person (he) with a word denoting a property of that person (old). In this function it resembles (and is often inter chainable with) a few other verbs with faded lexical meanings and clear linking properties (become, turn, get). The fading of the lexical meaning in grows is connected with changes in its combinability. As a linking word it acquires obligatory connection, whereas grows as a notional word has variable combinability. The semi-notional grows forms connections with adjectives, ad links, with which the notional grows is not combinable. The fading of the lexical meaning affects the isolatability of words. Semi-notional words rarely or never became sentences. A similar distinction can be drown between notional and semi-notional lexemes within a part of speech and between notional parts of speech. Preposition, conjunctions, articles and particles may be regarded as seminotional parts of speech when contrasted within the notional parts o f speech. What unites the semi-notional parts of speech is as follow: a) Their very general and comparatively weak lexical meanings meaning, precluding the use of substitutes. b) Their practically negative isolatability; c) Their obligatory unilateral (articles, particles) or bilateral (prepositions, conjunctions) combinability; d) Their functions of linking (conjunctions, prepositions of specifying (articles, particles) words. Naturally, the system of English parts of speech presented above is not the only some of the above-mentioned properties of parts of speech and neglect the other we may obtain a different list. Thus if we regard the grammatical categories of a part of speech as dominant feature and underestimate the lexica- grammatical meaning, combinability and syntactical function, we are prone to unite adverbs, 39 prepositions, conjunctions, interjection and particles into one class as H. Sweet and O. Jespersen do H. Sweet finds the following classes of words in Modern English; nouns, adjectives, numerals, verbs and particles16. O. Jeepers names substantives adjectives, adverbs, verbs, pronouns and particles17. In both cases the particles denote the jumble of words of different classes that are united by the absence of grammatical categories. In we classify notional words in accordance with their distribution in speech (which is essentially the same as their combinability) and neglect or underestimate the conclusion that there exist only four classes of words; nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs. In modern structural linguistics these classes are usually denoted by the letters N.A.Vand D respectively. Since the distribution of John and he is similar in many cases. Ex; Yes, this was also the end of CAPE TOWN and its bustling and exciting stream of life. Both words are thought to belong to the same class N spit of the differences in their lexica-grammatical meanings and paradigms. 2.1 Grammatical classes of words The words of language, depending on various formal and semantic features, are divided into grammatically relevant sets or classes. The traditional grammatical classes of words are called "parts of speech". Since the word is distinguished not only by grammatical, but also by semantico-lexemic properties, some scholars refer to parts of speech as "lexico-grammatical" series of words, or as "lexico-grammatical categories". It should be noted that the term "part of speech" is purely traditional and conventional, it can't be taken as in any way defining or explanatory. This name was introduced in the grammatical teaching of Ancient Greece, where the 16 17 H. Sweet, op cit.., y, l, p 56. O. Jespersen Essentials of English Grammar p 16 40 concept of the sentence was not yet explicitly identified in distinction to the general idea of speech, and where, consequently, no strict differentiation was drawn between the word as a vocabulary unit and the word as a functional element of the sentence. In modern linguistics, parts of speech are discriminated on the basis of the three criteria: "semantic", "formal", and "functional". The semantic criterion presupposes the evaluation of the generalised meaning, which is characteristic of all the subsets of words constituting a given part of speech. This meaning is understood as the "categorial meaning of the part of speech". The formal criterion provides for the exposition of the specific inflexional and derivational (word-building) features of all the lexemic subsets of a part of speech. The functional criterion concerns the syntactic role of words in the sentence typical of a part of speech. The said three factors of categorial characterisation of words are conventionally referred to as, respectively, "meaning", "form", and "function". In accord with the described criteria, words on the upper level of classification are divided into notional and functional, which reflects their division in the earlier grammatical tradition into changeable and unchangeable. To the notional parts of speech of the English language belong the noun, the adjective, the numeral, the pronoun, the verb, the adverb. The features of the noun within the identificational triad "meaning — form — function" are, correspondingly, the following: 1) the categorial meaning of substance ("thingness"); 2) the changeable forms of number and case; the specific suffixal forms of derivation (prefixes in English do not discriminate parts of speech as such); 3) the substantive functions in the sentence (subject, object, substantival predicative); prepositional connections; modification by an adjective. The features of the adjective: 1) the categorial meaning of property (qualitative and relative); 2) the forms of the degrees of comparison (for qualitative adjectives); the specific suffixal forms of derivation; 3) adjectival 41 functions in the sentence (attribute to a noun, adjectival predicative). The features of the numeral: 1) the categorial meaning of number (cardinal and ordinal); 2) the narrow set of simple numerals; the specific forms of composition for compound numerals; the specific suffixal forms of derivation for ordinal numerals; 3) the functions of numerical attribute and numerical substantive. The features of the pronoun: 1) the categorial meaning of indication (deixis); 2) the narrow sets of various status with the corresponding formal properties of categorial changeability and word-building; 3) the substantival and adjectival functions for different sets. The features of the verb: 1) the categorial meaning of process (presented in the two upper series of forms, respectively, as finite process and non-finite process); 2) the forms of the verbal categories of person, number, tense, aspect, voice, mood; the opposition of the finite and non-finite forms; 3) the function of the finite predicate for the finite verb; the mixed verbal — other than verbal functions for the non-finite verb. The features of the adverb: 1) the categorial meaning of the secondary property, i.e. the property of process or another property; 2) the forms of the degrees of comparison for qualitative adverbs; the specific suffixal forms of derivation; 3) the functions of various adverbial modifiers. We have surveyed the identifying properties of the notional parts of speech that unite the words of complete nominative meaning characterised by selfdependent functions in the sentence. Contrasted against the notional parts of speech are words of incomplete nominative meaning and non-self-dependent, mediatory functions in the sentence. These are functional parts of speech. On the principle of "generalised form" only unchangeable words are traditionally treated under the heading of functional parts of speech. As for their individual forms as such, they are simply presented by the list, since the number of these words is limited, so that they needn't be identified on any general, operational scheme. 42 To the basic functional series of words in English belong the article, the preposition, the conjunction, the particle, the modal word, the interjection. The article expresses the specific limitation of the substantive functions. The preposition expresses the dependencies and interdependences of substantive referents. The conjunction expresses connections of phenomena. The particle unites the functional words of specifying and limiting meaning. To this series, alongside of other specifying words, should be referred verbal postpositions as functional modifiers of verbs, etc. The modal word, occupying in the sentence a more pronounced or less pronounced detached position, expresses the attitude of the speaker to the reflected situation and its parts. Here belong the functional words of probability (probably, perhaps, etc.), of qualitative evaluation (fortunately, unfortunately, luckily, etc.), and also of affirmation and negation.The interjection, occupying a detached position in the sentence, is a signal of emotions. Each part of speech after its identification is further subdivided into subseries in accord with various particular semantico-functional and formal features of the constituent words. This subdivision is sometimes called "subcategorisation" of parts of speech. Thus, nouns are subcategorised into proper and common, animate and inanimate, countable and uncountable, concrete and abstract, etc. Cf.: Mary, Robinson, London, the Mississippi, Lake Erie — girl, person, city, river, lake; man, scholar, leopard, butterfly — earth, field, rose, machine; coin/coins, floor/floors, kind/kinds — news, growth, water, furniture; stone, grain, mist, leaf — honesty, love, slavery, darkness. Verbs are subcategorised into fully predicative and partially predicative, transitive and intransitive, actional and statal, factive and evaluative, etc. Cf.: walk, sail, prepare, shine, blow — can, may, shall, be, become; take, put, speak, listen, see, give — live, float, stay, ache, ripen, rain; write, play, strike, boil, receive, ride — exist, sleep, rest, thrive, revel, suffer; 43 roll, tire, begin, ensnare, build, tremble — consider, approve, mind, desire, hate, incline. Adjectives are subcategorised into qualitative and relative, of constant feature and temporary feature (the latter are referred to as "statives" and identified by some scholars as a separate part of speech under the heading of "category of state"), factive and evaluative, etc. Cf.: long, red, lovely, noble, comfortable — wooden, rural, daily, subterranean, orthographical; healthy, sickly, joyful, grievous, wry, blazing — well, ill, glad, sorry,awry,ablaze;tall, heavy, smooth, mental, native — kind, brave, wonderful,wise,stupid. The adverb, the numeral, the pronoun are also subject to the corresponding subcategorisations. We have drawn a general outline of the division of the lexicon into part of speech classes developed by modern linguists on the lines of traditional morphology. It is known that the distribution of words between different parts of speech may to a certain extent differ with different authors. This fact gives cause to some linguists for calling in question the rational character of the part of speech classification as a whole, gives them cause for accusing it of being subjective or "prescientific" in essence. Such nihilistic criticism, however, should be rejected as utterly ungrounded. Indeed, considering the part of speech classification on its merits, one must clearly realise that what is above all important about it is the fundamental principles of word-class identification, and not occasional enlargements or diminutions of the established groups, or re-distributions of individual words due to re-considerations of their subcategorial features. The very idea of subcategorisation as the obligatory second stage of the undertaken classification testifies to the objective nature of this kind of analysis. For instance, prepositions and conjunctions can be combined into one united series of "connectives", since the function of both is just to connect notional components of the sentence. In this case, on the second stage of 44 classification, the enlarged word-class of connectives will be subdivided into two main subclasses, namely, prepositional connectives and conjunctional connectives. Likewise, the articles can be included as a subset into the more general set of particles-specifiers. As is known, nouns and adjectives, as well as numerals, are treated in due contexts of description under one common classterm "names": originally, in the Ancient Greek grammatical teaching they were not differentiated because they had the same forms of morphological change (declension). On the other hand, in various descriptions of English grammar such narrow lexemic sets as the two words yes and no, the pronominal determiners of nouns, even the one anticipating pronoun it are given a separate class-item status — though in no way challenging or distorting the functional character of the treated units. It should be remembered that modern principles of part of speech identification have been formulated as a result of painstaking research conducted on the vast materials of numerous languages; and it is in Soviet linguistics that the three-criteria characterisation of parts of speech has been developed and applied to practice with the utmost consistency. The three celebrated names are especially notable for the elaboration of these criteria, namely, V. V. Vinogradov in connection with his study of Russian grammar, A. I. Smirnitsky and B. A. Ilyish in connection with their study of English grammar. Alongside of the three-criteria principle of dividing the words into grammatical (lexico-grammatical) classes modern linguistics has developed another, narrower principle of word-class identification based on syntactic featuring of words only. The fact is, that the three-criteria principle faces a special difficulty in determining the part of speech status of such lexemes as have morphological characteristics of notional words, but are essentially distinguished from notional words by their playing the role of grammatical mediators in phrases and sentences. Here belong, for instance, modal verbs together with their equivalents — suppletive fillers, auxiliary verbs, aspective verbs, intensifying adverbs, 45 determiner pronouns. This difficulty, consisting in the intersection of heterogeneous properties in the established word-classes, can evidently be overcome by recognising only one criterion of the three as decisive. Worthy of note is that in the original Ancient Greek grammatical teaching which put forward the first outline of the part of speech theory, the division of words into grammatical classes was also based on one determining criterion only, namely, on the formal-morphological featuring. It means that any given word under analysis was turned into a classified lexeme on the principle of its relation to grammatical change. In conditions of the primary acquisition of linguistic knowledge, and in connection with the study of a highly inflexional language this characteristic proved quite efficient. Still, at the present stage of the development of linguistic science, syntactic characterisation of words that has been made possible after the exposition of their fundamental morphological properties, is far more important and universal from the point of view of the general classificational requirements. This characterisation is more important, because it shows the distribution of words between different sets in accord with their functional destination. The role of morphology by this presentation is not underrated, rather it is further clarified from the point of view of exposing connections between the categorial composition of the word and its sentence-forming relevance. This characterisation is more universal, because it is not specially destined for the inflexional aspect of language and hence is equally applicable to languages of various morphological types. On the material of Russian, the principles of syntactic approach to the classification of word stock were outlined in the works of A. M. Peshkovsky. The principles of syntactic (syntactico-distributional) classification of English words were worked out by L. Bloomfield and his followers Z. Harris and especially Ch. Fries. 46 2.3. What are functional words in English Function words (or grammatical words or synsemantic words or structureclass words) are words that have little lexical meaning or have ambiguous meaning, but instead serve to express grammatical relationships with other words within a sentence, or specify the attitude or mood of the speaker. They signal the structural relationships that words have to one another and are the glue that holds sentences together. Thus, they serve as important elements to the structures of sentences. Consider the following two sentences: 1. The winfy prunkilmonger from the glidgement mominkled and brangified all his levensers vederously. 2. Glop angry investigator larm blonk government harassed gerfritz infuriated sutbor pumrog listeners thoroughly. In sentence (1) above, the content words have been changed into nonsense syllables but it is not difficult for one to posit that winfy is an adjective, prunkilmonger, glidgement, levensers as nouns, mominkled, brangified as verbs and vederously as an adverb based on clues like the derivational and inflectional morphemes. (The clue is in the suffixes: -y indicates adjectives such as "wintery"; -er, -ment and -ers indicates nouns such as "baker", "battlement" and "messengers"; -led and -fied suggests verbs such as "mingled" and "clarified"; and -ly is that of adverbs such as "vigorously"). Hence, even without lexical meaning, the sentence can be said to be rather "meaningful". However, when the reverse is done and the function words are being changed to nonsense syllables as in sentence (2), the result is a totally incomprehensible sentence as the grammatical meaning which is signaled by the structure words is not present. Hence, function words provide the grammatical relationships between the open class words and helps create meaning in sentences. 47 Words that are not function words are called content words (or open class words or lexical words or autosemantic words): these include nouns, verbs, adjectives, and most adverbs, although some adverbs are function words (e.g., then and why). Dictionaries define the specific meanings of content words, but can only describe the general usages of function words. By contrast, grammars describe the use of function words in detail, but treat lexical words in general terms only. Function words might be prepositions, pronouns, auxiliary verbs, conjunctions, grammatical articles or particles, all of which belong to the group of closed-class words. Interjections are sometimes considered function words but they belong to the group of open-class words. Function words might or might not be inflected or might have affixes. Function words belong to the closed class of words in grammar in that it is very uncommon to have new function words created in the course of speech, whereas in the open class of words (that is, nouns, verbs, adjectives, or adverbs) new words may be added readily (such as slang words, technical terms, and adoptions and adaptations of foreign words). See neologism. Each function word either gives some grammatical information on other words in a sentence or clause, and cannot be isolated from other words, or it may indicate the speaker's mental model as to what is being said. Grammatical words, as a class, can have distinct phonological properties from content words. Grammatical words sometimes do not make full use of all the sounds in a language. For example, in some of the Khoisan languages, most content words begin with clicks, but very few function words do. In English, very few words other than function words begin with voiced th- [ð] (see Pronunciation of English th). The following is a list of the kind of words considered to be function words: 48 articles — the and a. In some inflected languages, the articles may take on the case of the declension of the following noun. pronouns — inflected in English, as he — him, she — her, etc. adpositions — uninflected in English conjunctions — uninflected in English auxiliary verbs — forming part of the conjugation (pattern of the tenses of main verbs), always inflected interjections — sometimes called "filled pauses", uninflected particles — convey the attitude of the speaker and are uninflected, as if, then, well, however, thus, etc. expletives — take the place of sentences, among other functions. pro-sentences — yes, okay, etc. Full-Text Online Librarywww.questia.com/Online_LibraryOnline library of books, journals, articles. Research online. Spoken English Lessonswww.alison.com/English-SpeakingVideo/Audio English Class w Cert Completely Free -Start Course Now! Summer Instituteced.berkeley.eduEnvironmental Design Summer Programs Immerse yourself in design culture A word that expresses a grammatical or structural relationship with other words in a sentence. In contrast to a content word, a function word has little or no meaningful content. Function words are also known as grammatical words. Function words include determiners (for example, the, that), conjunctions (and, but), prepositions (in, of), pronouns (she, they), auxiliary verbs (be, have), modals (may, could), and quantifers (some, both). 49 "In contrast to content words, function words, such as determiners and auxiliary verbs, do not have 'contentful' meanings; rather, they are defined in terms of their use, or function. For example, the meaning of the auxiliary verb is in Leo is running is difficult to define, but we can say that the function of the auxiliary verb is in this case is to express present tense (to see this, compare Leo was running). Function words are closed class words. Though we freely add new members to open classes of words, we don't coin new determiners or conjunctions, nor do we come up with new pronouns, modal verbs, or auxiliary verbs (have, be, and do)." (Kristin Denham and Anne Lobeck, Linguistics for Everyone: An Introduction. Wadsworth, 2010) "Function words are like thumbtacks. We don't notice thumbtacks; we look at the calendar or the poster they are holding up. If we were to take the tacks away, the calendar and the poster would fall down. Likewise, if we took the function words out of speech, it would be hard to figure out what was going on: took function words speech hard figure going on. That is what the previous sentence would look like if we took out all of the function words." Note that go(ing) on is a phrasal verb. Function Words in Speech "Most monosyllabic function words, unlike content words, are unstressed . . .. Prepositions, conjunctions, and articles are regularly unstressed, and auxiliary verbs and adverbs are usually unstressed--though note that auxiliaries are often used for emphasis, in which case they are stressed: "I did pay the bills." (Derek Attridge, Poetic Rhythm. Cambridge Univ. Press, 1995) 50 2.4. The differences between functional and content words Each word in English belongs to one of the eight parts of speech. Each word in English is also either a content words or a function word. Let's think about what these two types mean: Content = information, meaning Function = necessary words for grammar In other words, content words give us the most important information while function words are used to stitch those words together. Content words are usually nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs. A noun tells us which object, a verb tells us about the action happening, or the state. Adjectives give us details about objects and people and adverbs tell us how, when or where something is done. Nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs give us important information required for understanding. Noun = person, place or thing Verb = action, state Adjective = describes an object, person, place or thing Adverb = tells us how, where or when something happens Linguists usually draw a distinction between content words, those words whose meaning is best described in a dictionary and which belong in open sets so that new ones can freely be added to the language, and function words, words with little inherent meaning but with important roles in the grammar of a language. Typically the content words are nouns, verbs, adjectives and some adverbs, while function words are pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, auxiliary verbs, and some adverbs. 51 Some of these function words are homonyms of content words, so that only the context can tell you which meaning is intended. Among the adverbs these include BACK, JUST and STILL. Among the auxiliary verbs are CAN, DOES, MAY MIGHT and MUST. Among the prepositions/conjunctions are DOWN, ROUND and TILL, and among the determiners is MINE. There will be more of these overlaps if you use software which standardizes input by stripping punctuation, in which cases items like CAN'T, I'LL, SHE'D and SHE'LL will turn into CANT, ILL, SHED and SHELL. So coming from above mentioned information there arises a question: Why can’t we draw a sharp line between content words and function words? Criteria for Word Classes we use a combination of three criteria for determining the word class of a word: The meaning of the word, the form or `shape' of the word, the position or environment of the word in a sentence. What is a function word? Little semantic content of its own Indicates a grammatical relationship. No identifiable meaning closed-class word such as preposition, conjunction or article Different names for function words: Function words Grammatical words auto semantic words little lexical meaning. Have ambiguous meaning. For example: This is a boy. This boy is running. Serve to express grammatical relationships with other words within a sentence specify the attitude or mood of the speaker. Function words: The following is a list considered to be function words: articles: the, a., pronouns: he, him, she, her, etc., conjunctions: and, that, when, while, although, or., interjections: sometimes called filled uninflected modal verbs : can, must, will, should, ought, need, used to., auxiliary verbs: be (is, am, are), have, got, do., particles: if, then, well, however, thus, no, not, nor, as etc., expletives: take the place of sentences, among other functions., pro-sentences: yes, 52 okay, etc., prepositions: of, at, in, without, between., pronouns: he, they, anybody, it, one., determiners: the, a, that, my, more, much, either, neither. All grammatical morphology is “functional”. What is a content word? 1) Not function word; 2) open class word; 3) lexical word. Uninflected stems are content “words”. Content words are: 1) Nouns: John, room, answer; 2) Full verbs: search, grow, hold, have; 3) Adjectives: happy, new, large, grey; 4) Adverbs: really, completely, very, also, enough; 5) Numerals: one, thousand, first; 6) Interjections: eh, ugh, phew, well; 7) Yes/No answers: yes, no (as answers). Differences between content and function words. 1) The class of function words is closed. 2) Do not easily add new words to this set. 3) English has 300 closed class words. 4) The class of content words is open. 5) New words are being added in every language. 6) Content words obey the minimal word constraint but function words do not. 7) Little function words: I, the, a, it, of, etc… 8) No open class words are this little. 9) Function words are acquired later than content words. Coming from above mentioned information about differences between content and functional words arises another question: Can we draw a sharp line between content words and function words? Answer is: NO. Because, the same 53 lexical word can function either content or function word depending on its function in an utterance. For example: 1) “I have come to see you”. “have” - is a function word (auxiliary verb). “I have three apples”. “have” is a content word (full verb). 2) “One has one's principles”. “one”- is a function word (pronoun). “I have one apple”. “one”- is a content word (numeral). 3) “I have no more money”. “no”- is a function word (a negative particle). “No. I am not coming”. “no”- is a content word (Yes/No answer). Numerals are a subclass of nouns: like nouns, they can take determiners the two of us, the first of many. They can even have numerals as determiners before them. Example: “five twos are ten” “twos” is a plural noun, it has the determiner five before it. Considerable overlap between the determiner class and the subclass of pronouns . Many words can be both. Example: Pronoun. “This is a very boring book”. “That's an excellent film”. Determiner “That film is excellent”. “This book is very boring”. Determiners function in much the same way as nouns and they can be replaced by nouns. Examples: “This is a very boring book”. “Ivanhoe is a very boring book”. 54 “That's an excellent film”. “Witness is an excellent film”. On the other hand, when these words are determiners, they cannot be replaced by nouns, examples: “This book is very boring”. “Ivanhoe book is very boring”. “That film is excellent”. “Witness film is excellent”. Personal pronouns (I, you, he, etc) cannot be determiners. This is also true for possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his/hers, ours, and theirs). These pronouns do have corresponding forms which are determiners. Examples: 1) “The white car is mine”. “My car is white”. 2) “Yours is the blue coat”. “Your coat is blue”. 3) “The car in the garage is his/hers”. “His/her car is in the garage”. 4) “David's house is big but ours is bigger”. 5) “Our house is bigger than David's”. 6) “Theirs is the house on the left”. 7) “Their house is on the left”. Stressed words carry the meaning or the sense behind the sentence. For this reason they are called “Content Words”. They carry the content of the sentence. Unstressed words tend to be smaller words, have more of a grammatical significance. They help the sentence “function” syntactically. For this reason they are called “Function Words”. Sometimes “Function Words” are referred to as “Structure Words”. For example: “I am talking to the clever students”. “You’re sitting on the desk but you aren’t listening to me”. Example 2: “No!” screamed David angrily as he wiped away the tears from his face and ran into his bedroom. “What’s your name and how are you today?” 55 3.0. CHAPTER III. Aspects of teaching grammatical structure 3.1. Problems of teaching Grammar Language is the chief means by which the human personality expresses itself and fulfills its basic need for social interaction with other persons. Robert Lado wrote that language functions owing to the language skills. A person who knows a language perfectly uses a thousand and one grammar lexical, phonetic rules when he is speaking. Language skills help us to choose different words and models in our speech. It is clear that the term “grammar” has meant various things at various times and sometimes several things at one time. This plurality of meaning is characteristic of the present time and is the source of confusions in the discussion of grammar as part of the education of children. There have been taking place violent disputes on the subject of teaching grammar at school. The ability to talk about the grammar of a language, to recite its rules, is also very different from ability to speak and understand a language or to read and write it. Those who can use a language are often unable to recite its rules, and those who can recite its rules can be unable to use it. Grammar organizes the vocabulary and as a result we have sense units. There is a system of stereotypes, which organizes words into sentences. But what skill does grammar develop? First of all it gives the ability to make up sentences correctly, to reproduce the text adequately. (The development of practical skills and habits) The knowledge of the specific grammar structure helps pupils point out the differences between the mother tongue and the target language. The knowledge of grammar develops abilities to abstract systematize plural facts. The name of my work is “Teaching Grammar”. And the main aim is to clearly recognize how to teach grammar right. To judge by the way some people speak, there is no place for grammar in the language course nowadays; yet it is, in reality, as important as it ever was exercise 56 of correct grammar, if he is to attain any skill of effective use of the language, but he need not know consciously formulated rules to account to him for that he does unconsciously correctly. In order to understand a language and to express oneself correctly one must assimilate the grammar mechanism of the language studied. Indeed, one may know all the words in a sentence and yet fail to understand it, if one does not see the relation between the words in the given sentence. And vice versa, a sentence may contain one, two, and more unknown words but if one has a good knowledge of the structure of the language one can easily guess the meaning of these words or at least find them in a dictionary. No speaking is possible without the knowledge of grammar, without the forming of a grammar mechanism. If learner has acquired such a mechanism, he can produce correct sentences in a foreign language. Paul Roberts writes: “Grammar is something that produces the sentences of a language. By something we mean a speaker of English. If you speak English natively, you have built into you rules of English grammar. In a sense, you are an English grammar. You possess, as an essential part of your being, a very complicated apparatus which enables you to produce infinitely many sentences, all English ones, including many that you have never specifically learned. Furthermore by applying you rule you can easily tell whether a sentence that you hear a grammatical English sentence or not.” A command of English as is envisaged by the school syllabus cannot be ensured without the study of grammar. Pupils need grammar to be able to aud, speak, read, and write in the target language. To develop one’s speech means to acquire essential patterns of speech and grammar patterns in particular. Children must use these items automatically during speech-practice. The automatic use of grammar items in our speech (oral and written) supposes mastering some particular skills – the skills of using grammar items to express one’s own thoughts, in other words to make up your sentences. We must get so-called reproductive or active grammar skills. 57 A skill is treated as an automatic part of awareness. Automatization of the action is the main feature of a skill. The nature of Automatization is characterized by that psychological structure of the action which adopts to the conditions of performing the action owing frequent experience. The action becomes more frequent, correct and accurate and the number of the operations is shortened while forming the skill the character of awareness of the action is changing, i.e. fullness of understanding is paid to the conditions and quality of performing to the control over it and regulation. To form some skills is necessary to know that the process of the forming skills has some steps: Only some definite elements of the action are automatic. The automatization occurs under more difficult conditions, when the child can’t concentrate his attention on one element of the action. The whole structure of the action is improved and the automatization of its separate components is completed. What features do the productive grammar skills have? During our speech the reproductive grammar skills are formed together with lexis and intonation, they must express the speaker’s intentions. The actions in the structural setting of the lexis must be learnt. The characteristic feature of the reproductive grammar skills is their flexibility. It doesn’t depend on the level of Automatization, i.e. on perfection of skill here mean the original action: both the structure of sentence, and forms of the words are reproduced by the speaker using different lexical material. If the child reproduces sentences and different words, which have been learnt by him as “a ready-made thing” he can say that there is no grammar skill. Learning the readymade forms, word combinations and sentences occurs in the same way as learning lexis. The grammar skill is based on the general conclusion. The grammar action can and must occur only in the definite lexical limits, on the definite lexical 58 material. If the pupil can make up his sentence frequently, accurately and correctly from the grammatical point of view, he has got the grammar skill. Teaching grammar at school using the theoretical knowledge brought some critical and led to confusion. All the grammatical rules were considered to be evil and there were some steps to avoid using them at school. But when we learn grammatical items in models we use substitution and such a type of training gets rid of grammar or “neutralizes” it. By the way, teaching the skills to make up sentences by analogy is a step on the way of forming grammar skills. It isn’t the lexical approach to grammar and it isn’t neutralization of grammar, but using basic sentences in order to use exercises by analogy and to reduce number of grammar rules when forming the reproductive grammar skills. To form the reproductive grammar skills we must follow such steps: Selection the model of sentence. Selection the form of the word and formation of word forms. Selection the auxiliary words-preposition, articles, and etc. and their combination with principle words. The main difficulty of the reproductive (active) grammar skills is to correspond the purposes of the statement, communicative approach (a question an answer and so on), words, meanings, expressed by the grammatical patterns. In that case we use basic sentences, in order to answer the definite situation. The main factor of the forming of the reproductive grammar skill is that pupils need to learn the lexis of the language. They need to learn the meanings of the words and how they are used. We must be sure that our pupils are aware of the vocabulary they need at their level and they can use the words in order to form their own sentence. Each sentence contains a grammar structure. The mastering the grammar skill lets pupils save time and strength, energy, which can give opportunity to create. Learning a number of sentences containing the same grammatical structure and a lot of words containing the same grammatical form isn’t rational. But the generalization of the grammar item can relieve the work of the mental activity and let the teacher speed up the work and the children realize creative activities. 59 The process of creation is connected with the mastering of some speech stereotypes the grammatical substrate is hidden in basic sentences. Grammar is presented as itself. Such a presentation of grammar has its advantage: the grammar patterns of the basic sentences are connected with each other. But this approach gives pupils the opportunity to realize the grammar item better. The teaching must be based on grammar explanations and grammar rules. Grammar rules are to be understood as a special way of expressing communicative activity. The reproductive grammar skills suppose to master the grammar actions which are necessary for expressing thoughts in oral and written forms. The automatic perception of the text supposes the reader to identify the grammar form according to the formal features of words, word combinations, sentences which must be combined with the definite meaning. One must learn the rules in order to identify different grammatical forms. Pupils should get to know their features, the ways of expressing them in the language. We teach children to read and by means of grammar. It reveals the relation between words in the sentence. Grammar is of great important when one teaches reading and auding. The forming of the perceptive grammar and reproductive skills is quite different. The steps of the work is mastering the reproductive skills differ from the steps in mastering the perceptive skills. To master the reproductive grammar skills one should study the basic sentences or models. To master the perceptive grammar skills one should identify and analyze the grammar item. Though training is of great importance to realize the grammar item. Before speaking about the selection of grammar material it is necessary to consider the concept “grammar”, i.e., what it meant by “grammar”. By grammar one can mean adequate comprehension and correct usage of words in the act of communication, that is, intuitive knowledge of the grammar of the language. It is a set of reflexes enabling a person to communicate with his associates. Such knowledge is acquired by a child in the mother tongue before he goes to schools. 60 This “grammar” functions without the individual’s awareness of technical nomenclature; in other words, he has no idea of the system of the language, and to use all the word-endings for singular and plural, for tense, and all the other grammar rules without special grammar lessons only due to the abundance of auding and speaking. His young mind grasps the facts and “makes simple grammar rules” for arranging the words to express carious thoughts and feelings. This is true because sometimes little children make mistakes by using a common rule for words to which that rule cannot be applied. For example, a little English child might be heard to say Two mans comed instead of Two men come, because the child is using the plural “s” rule for man to which the rule does not apply, and the past tense ed rule for come which does not obey the ordinary rule for the past tense formation. A little Russian child can say ножов instead of ножей using the caseending “ов” for ножи to which it does not apply. Such mistakes are corrected as the child grows older and learns more of his language. By “grammar” we also mean the system of the language, the discovery and description of the nature of language itself. It is not a natural grammar, but a constructed one. There are several constructed grammars: traditional, structural, and transformational grammars. Traditional grammar studies the forms of words (morphology) and how they are put together in sentences (syntax); structural grammar studies structures of various levels of the language (morpheme level) and syntactic level; transformational grammar studies basic structures and transformation rules. What we need is simplest and shortest grammar that meets the requirements of the school syllabus in foreign languages. This grammar must be simple enough to be grasped and held by any pupil. We cannot say that this problem has been solved. Since graduates are expected to acquire language proficiency in aural comprehension, speaking and reading grammar material should be selected for the purpose. There exist principles of selecting grammar material both for teaching speaking knowledge (active minimum) and for teaching reading knowledge 61 (passive minimum), the main one is the principle of frequency, i.e., how frequently this or that grammar item occurs. For example, the Present Simple (Indefinite) is frequently used both in conversation and in various texts. Therefore it should be included in the grammar minimum. For selecting grammar material for reading the principle of polysemia, for instance, is of great importance. Pupils should be taught to distinguish such grammar items which serve to express different meanings. For example, -s (es) Plurals of nouns The 3d person singular of Present Simple (Indefinite) The selection of grammar material involves choosing the appropriate kind of linguistic description, i.e., the grammar which constitutes the best base for developing speech habits. Thus the school syllabus reflect a traditional approach to determining grammar material for foreign language teaching, pupils are given sentences patterns or structures, and through these structures they assimilate the English language, acquire grammar mechanisms of speech The content of grammar teaching is disputable among teachers and methodologists, and there are various approaches to the problem, pupils should, whatever the content of the course, assimilate the ways of fitting words together to form sentences and be able to easily recognize grammar forms and structures while hearing and reading, to reproduce phrases and sentences stored up in their memory and say or write sentences of their own, using grammar items appropriate to the situation. 62 3.2 Teaching pronominal components to the elementary and intermediate level students English is an analytical language, in which grammatical meaning in largely expressed through the use of additional words and by changes in word order. Russian is a synthetic language, in which the majority of grammatical forms are created through changes in the structure of words, by means of a developed system of prefixes, suffixes and ending. (p. 121, Brown C. and Jule “Teaching the spoken language”, Cambridge, 1983) No one knows exactly how people learn languages although a great deal of research has been done into the subject. Many methods have been proposed for the teaching of foreign language. And they have met with varying degrees of success and failure. We should know that the method by which children are taught must have some effect on their motivation. If they find it deadly boring they will probably become de-motivated, whereas if they have confidence in the method they will find it motivating. Child learners differ from adult learners in many ways. Children are curious, their attention is of a shorter duration, they are quite differently motivated in, and their interests are less specialized. They need frequent of activity; they need activities which are exciting and stimulating their curiosity; they need to be involved in something active. We shall examine such methods as “The Grammar – Translation Method”, ”The Direct Method”, “The Audio-lingual Method”. And we pay attention to the teaching grammar of the foreign language. We shall comment those methods, which have had a long history. This method was widely used in teaching the classics, namely Latin, and it was transferred to the teaching of modern languages when they were introduced into schools. In the grammar-translation mode, the books begin with definitions of the parts of speech, declensions, conjugations, rules to be memorized, examples illustrating the rules, and exceptions. Often each unit has a paragraph to be 63 translated into the target language and one to be translated into native one. These paragraphs illustrate the grammar rules studied in the unit. The student is expected to apply the rules on his own. This involves a complicated mental manipulation of the conjugations and declensions in the order memorized, down to the form that might fit the translation. As a result, students are unable to use the language, and they sometimes develop an inferiority complex about languages in general. Exceptionally bright and diligent students do learn languages by this method, or in spite of it, but they would learn with any method. (R. Lado) We list the major characteristics of Grammar Translation. Classes are taught in the mother tongue, with little active use of the target language. Much vocabulary is taught in the form of lists of isolated words. Long elaborate explanations of the intricacies of grammar are given. Grammar provides the rules for putting words together, and instruction often focuses on the form and inflection of word. Reading of difficult classical texts is begun early. Little attention is paid to the content of texts, which are treated as exercises in grammatical analysis. Often the only drills are exercises in translating disconnected sentences from the target language into the mother tongue. Little or no attention is given to pronunciation. 18 The grammar-translation method is largely discredited today. With greater interest in modern languages for communication the inadequacy of grammartranslation methods became evident. The Direct Method appeared as a reaction against the grammar-translation method. There was a movement in Europe that emphasized language learning by direct contact with the foreign language in meaningful situations. This movement 18 Brown H., Douglas ‘Principles of language teaching’, N.Y., 1987 64 resulted in various individual methods with various names, such as new method, natural method, and even oral method, but they can all be referred to as direct methods or the direct method. In addition to emphasizing direct contact with the foreign language, the direct method usually deemphasized or eliminated translation and the memorization of conjugations, declensions, and rules, and in some cases it introduced phonetics and phonetic transcription. The direct method assumed that learning a foreign language is the same as learning the mother tongue, that is, that exposing the student directly to the foreign language impresses it perfectly upon his mind. This is true only up to a point, since the psychology of learning a second language differs from that of learning the first. The child is forced to learn the first language because he has no other effective way to express his wants. In learning a second language this compulsion is largely missing, since the student knows that he can communicate through his native language when necessary. The basic premise of Direct Method was that second language learning should be more like first language learning: lots of active oral interaction, spontaneous use of the language, no translation between first and second languages, and little or no analysis of grammatical rules. We can summarize the principles of the Direct Method: Classroom instruction was conducted exclusively in the target language. Only everyday vocabulary and sentences were taught. Oral communication skills were built up in a carefully graded progression organized around question-and-answer exchanges between teachers and student in small, intensive classes. Grammar was taught inductively, i.e. the learner may discover the rules of grammar for himself after he has become acquainted with many examples. New teaching points were introduced orally. 65 Concrete vocabulary was taught through demonstration, objects, and pictures; abstract vocabulary was taught by association of ideas. Both speech and listening comprehension were taught. Correct pronunciation and grammar were emphasized. The Audiolingual Method (It is also called Mimicry-memorization method) was the method developed in the Intensive Language Program. It was successful because of high motivation, intensive practice, small classes, and good models, in addition to linguistically sophisticated descriptions of the foreign language and its grammar. Grammar is taught essentially as follows: Some basic sentences are memorized by imitation. Their meaning is given in normal expressions in the native language, and the students are not expected to translate word for word. When the basic sentences have been overlearned (completely memorized so that the student can rattle them off without effort), the student reads fairly extensive descriptive grammar statements in his native language, with examples in the target language and native language equivalents. He then listens to further conversational sentences for practice in listening. Finally, practices the dialogues using the basic sentences and combinations of their parts. When he can, he varies the dialogues within the material hr has already learned. The characteristics of ALM may be summed up in the following list: New material is presented in dialog form. There is dependence on mimicry, memorization of set phrases and overlearning. Structures are sequenced by means of contrastive analysis and taught one at a time. Structural patterns are taught using repetitive drills. There is a little or no grammatical explanation: grammar is taught by inductive analogy rather than deductive explanation. Vocabulary is strictly limited and learned in context. 66 There is much use of tapes, language labs, and visual aids. Great importance is attached to pronunciation. very little use of the mother tongue by teachers is permitted. Successful responses are immediately reinforced. There is a great effort to get students to produce error-free utterances. There is a tendency to manipulate language and disregard content. We shall briefly review the treatment of grammatical explanations by some of the major methods. This is not meant to be an exhaustive study of all available methods; rather it is an attempt to show the variety of ways in which different methods deal with grammar explanations and may help teachers in evaluating available materials. Grammar translation is associated with formal rule statement. Learning proceeds, deductively, and the rule is generally stated by the teacher, in a textbook, or both. Traditional abstract grammatical terminology is used. Drills include translation into native language. The direct method is characterized by meaningful practice and exclusion of the mother tongue. This method has had many interpretations, some of which include an analysis of structure, but generally without the use of abstract grammatical terminology.19 The audio-lingual method stresses an inductive presentation with extensive pattern practice. Writing is discouraged in the early stages of learning a structure. Here again, there has been considerable variation in the realization of this approach. In some cases, no grammatical explanation of any kind is offered. In other, the teacher might focus on a particular structure by isolating an example on the board, or through contrast. When grammatical explanation is offered it is usually done at the end of the lesson as a summary of behavior (Politzer, 1965), or 19 Rogova, G.V., “Methods of teaching English”; М.,1970 67 in later versions of this method the rule might be stated in the middle of the lesson and followed by additional drills. Each method is realized in techniques. By a technique we mean an individual way in doing something, in gaining a certain goal in teaching learning process. The method and techniques the teacher should use in teaching children of the primary school is the direct method, and various techniques which can develop pupils` listening comprehension and speaking. Pupils are given various exercises, connected with the situational use of words and sentence patterns. This means that in sentence patterns teaching points are determined so that pupils can concentrate their attention on some elements of the pattern to be able to use them as orienting points when speaking or writing the target language. For example, I can see a book. I can see many books. The teacher draws pupils’ attention to the new element in the form of a rule, a very short one. It is usually done in the mother tongue. For example: Помни, что во множественном числе к существительному прибавляется окончание –s [s,z] или –es [IZ]. Or: Помни, что в отрицательных предложениях ставится вспомогательный глагол “do not” (“does not”).The rule helps the learner to understand and to assimilate the structural meaning of the elements. It ensures a conscious approach to learning. This approach provides favourable conditions for the speedy development of correct and more flexible language use. However it does not mean that the teacher should ask pupils to say this or that rule, Rules do not ensure the mastery of the language. They only help to attain the practical goal. If a pupil can recognize and employ correctly the forms that are appropriate, that is sufficient. When the learner can give ample proof of these abilities we may say that he has fulfilled the syllabus requirements. Conscious learning is also ensured when a grammar item is contrasted with another grammar item which is usually confused. The contrast is brought out through oppositions. For example: I get up at 7 o’clock. It’s 7 o’clock. I am getting up. The Present Simple is contrasted with the Present Progressive. 68 He has come. The Present Perfect is contrasted with the Past Simple. Give me a book (to read into the train). The indefinite article is contrasted Give me the book (you have promised), with the definite article. I like soup (more than any other food). The zero article is contrasted with the definite article. I like the soup ( you have cooked). He came an hour ago. Rule for the teacher: The teacher should realize difficulties the sentence pattern presents for his pupils. Comparative analysis of the grammar item in English and in Russian or within the English language may be helpful. He should think of the shortest and simplest way for presentation of the new grammar item. The teacher should remember the more he speaks about the language the less time is left to practice. The more the teacher explains the less his pupils understand what he is trying to explain, this leads to the teacher giving more information than is necessary, which does not help the pupils in the usage of this particular grammar item, only hinders them. It means that pupils learn those grammar items which they need for immediate use either in oral or written language. For example, from the first steps of language learning pupils need the Possessive Case for objects which belong to different people, namely, Mike’s textbook, Ann’s mother, the girl’s doll, the boys’ room, etc. The teacher masters grammar through performing various exercises in using a given grammar item. Grammar items are introduced and drilled in structures or sentence patterns. It has been proved and accepted by the majority of teachers and methodologists that whenever the aim to teach pupils the command of the language, and speaking in particular, the structural approach meets the requirements. Pupils are taught to understand English when spoken to and to speak it from the very beginning. This is possible provided they have learned sentence patterns 69 and words as a pattern and they know how to adjust them to them to the situations they are given. In our country the structural approach to the teaching of grammar attracted the attention of many teachers. As a result structural approach to grammar teaching has been adopted by our schools since it allows the pupil to make up sentences by analogy, to use the same pattern for various situations. Pupils learn sentence patterns and how to use them in oral and written language. Rule for the teacher: The teacher should furnish pupils with words to change the lexical (semantic) meaning of the sentence pattern so that pupils will be able to use it in different situations. He should assimilate the grammar mechanism involved in sentence pattern and not the sentence itself. Pupils learn a grammar item used in situations. For example, the Possessive Case may be effectively introduced in classroom situations. The teacher takes or simply touches various things and says This is Nina’s pen; That is Sasha’s exercise-book, and so on. Rule for the teacher: The teacher should select the situations for the particular grammar item he is going to present. He should look through the textbook and other teaching materials and find those situations which can ensure comprehension and the usage of the item. Grammar items pupils need for conversation are taught by the oral approach, i.e., pupils aud them, perform various oral exercises, finally see them printed, and write sentences using them. For example, pupils need the Present Progressive for conversation. They listen to sentences with the verbs in the Present Progressive spoken by the teacher or the speaker (when a tape recorder is used) and relate them to the situations suggested. Then pupils use the verbs in the Present Progressive in various oral sentences in which the Present Progressive is used. Grammar items necessary for reading are taught through reading. 70 Rule for the teachers: If the grammar item the teacher is going to present belongs to those pupils need for conversation, he should select the oral approach method for teaching. If pupils need the grammar item for reading, the teacher should start with reading and writing sentences in which the grammar item occurs. While preparing for the lesson at which a new grammar item should be introduced, the teacher must realize the difficulties pupils will meet in assimilating this new element of the English grammar. They may be of three kinds: difficulties in form, meaning, and usage. The teacher thinks of the ways to overcome these difficulties: how to convey the meaning of the grammar item either through situations or with the help of the mother tongue; what rule should be used; what exercises should be done; their types and number. Then he thinks of the sequence in which pupils should work to overcome these difficulties, i.e., , from observation and comprehension through conscious imitation to usage in conversation (communicative exercises). Then the teacher considers the form in which he presents the grammar item – orally, in writing, or in reading. And, finally, the teacher plans pupils’ activity while they are learning this grammar item (point): their individual work, mass work, work in unison, and work in pairs, always bearing in mind that for assimilation pupils need examples of the sentence pattern in which this grammar item occurs. 4.0 CONCLUSION. The question of contextual-semantics of grammatical classification of words in English language was mentioned in many works. But this problem was studied in that or other foreshortened. The purpose of the given work is 71 to systematize the data about contextual-semantics of grammatical classification of words and their main parts of speech. The basic results of research can be generalized as follows; the words of language, depending on various formal and semantic features, are divided into grammatically relevant sets or classes. The traditional grammatical classes of words are called "parts of speech". Since the word is distinguished not only by grammatical, but also by semantico-lexemic properties, some scholars refer to parts of speech as "lexico-grammatical" series of words, or as "lexico-grammatical categories" [Смирницкий, (1), 33; (2), 100]. It should be noted that the term "part of speech" is purely traditional and conventional, it can't be taken as in any way defining or explanatory. This name was introduced in the grammatical teaching of Ancient Greece, where the concept of the sentence was not yet explicitly identified in distinction to the general idea of speech, and where, consequently, no strict differentiation was drawn between the word as a vocabulary unit and the word as a functional element of the sentence. In modern linguistics, parts of speech are discriminated on the basis of the three criteria: "semantic", "formal", and "functional". In accord with the described criteria, words on the upper level of classification are divided into notional and functional, which reflects their division in the earlier grammatical tradition into changeable and unchangeable. To the notional parts of speech of the English language belong the noun, the adjective, the numeral, the pronoun, the verb, the adverb. Each part of speech after its identification is further subdivided into subseries in accord with various particular semantico-functional and formal features of the constituent words. This subdivision is sometimes called "subcategorisation" of parts of speech. Though grammarians have been studying parts of speech for over two thousands years, the criteria used for classifying lexemes are not yet agreed upon. Hence there is a good deal of subjectivity in defining the classes of lexemes and we consequently, find different classifications. Still parts of speech are not altogether 72 an invention of grammarians: what really lies at the bottom of this division of material reality. The bulk of the class denoting substances is made up of words denoting material objects such as table, window, milk etc. the vernal of the class of lexemes meaning processes is constituted by lexemes denoting concrete actions, such as those writing, reading, speaking, etc. The lexemes of a part of speech are first of all united by their content, i, e, by their meaning. Now, this general meaning of a part of speech cannot be grammatical because the members of one lexeme have different grammatical meanings: boy’s (singular number, possessive case) boys (plural common case). Nevertheless, the meaning of a part of speech is closely connected with certain typical grammatical meanings. The general meaning of part of speech cannot be lexical. If all the words of part of speech had the same lexical meaning, they would constitute one lexeme. But the meaning of part of speech is closely connected with the lexical meanings of its constituent lexemes. It is always an abstraction from those meanings. Lexemes united by the general lexicon-grammatical meaning of “substance” are called nouns. Those having the general lexicon-grammatical meaning of “action” are called verbs, etc., etc The general lexicon-grammatical meaning is the intrinsic property of a part of speech. Connected with it are some properties that find, so to say, outward expression. Lexicon-grammatical morphemes are once of these properties. The stems of nouns lexemes often include the morphemes –er, -ist, -ness, -ship, -ment (worker, Marxist firmness, friendship, management). The stems of verb lexemes includes the morphemes -ize, -iffy, -be, -en, -en (industrialize, electrify, becloud, enrich, darken). Adjective stems stems often have the suffixes,-full, -ish, -oust, ive (careful, fearless, boyish, continuous, evasive) . Thus the presence of a certain lexicon-grammatical morpheme in the stem of a lexeme- often stamps it as 73 belonging: to a definite part of speech. Many of these morphemes are regularly used to from lexemes of one class from those all other class. For instance, the suffix –ness often forms noun stems from adjective stems. Dark-darkness, sweetsweetness, thick-thickness, full-fullness, etc. the absence of the suffix in dark as contrasted with –ness of darkness looks like a zero morpheme characterizing dark as on adjective. A part of speech is characterized by its grammatical categories manifested in the opossums and paradigms of its lexemes. Nouns have the categories of number and case. Verbs possess the categories of tense, voice, mood, etc. Adjectives have the category of the degrees of comparison. That is why then paradigms of lexemes belonging to different parts of speech are different. The paradigms of a verb lexemes is long: write, writes, wrote, shall write, will write, am writing, is writing, was writing, were writing, etc. The paradigm of a noun lexeme is much shorter: sister, sisters. The paradigm of an adjective lexeme is still shorter: cold, colder, coldest. The paradigm of an adverb like always, is the shortest as the lexeme consists of one word. It must be borne in mind, however, that not all the lexemes of a part of speech have the same paradigms. Cf. 1. Student book information. In conclusion I can say that naturally, the system of English parts of speech presented above is not the only some of the above-mentioned properties of parts of speech and neglect the other we may obtain a different list. Thus if we regard the grammatical categories of a part of speech as dominant feature and underestimate the lexica- grammatical meaning, combinability and syntactical function, we are prone to unite adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, interjection and particles into one class as H. Sweet and O. Jespersen do H. Sweet finds the following classes of words in Modern English; nouns, adjectives, numerals, verbs and particles. O. 74 Jeepers names substantives adjectives, adverbs, verbs, pronouns and particles. In both cases the particles denote the jumble of words of different classes that are united by the absence of grammatical categories. In we classify notional words in accordance with their distribution in speech (which is essentially the same as their combinability) and neglect or underestimate the conclusion that there exist only four classes of words; nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs 5.0 BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. From the President I.A.Karimov’s report at the Oliy Majlis session of the first convocation,February, 1995,стр.185 2. И.А.Каримов. Гармонично-развитое поколение-основа прогресса Узбекистана. Ташкент. 1998. Стр 158-168 3. Azar Betty Shrampfer "Fundamentals of English Grammar" Second Edition, New Jersey "Prentice-Hall" 1992. 75 4. Akhmanova O. et.al. Syntax: Theory and Method. Moscow, 1972,256p. 5. Allen W.S. Living English Structure. Longmans, 1960,270p. 6. Alksnis I. The Hazards of Translation. 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Longman,1958,345p. 30.Rogova, G.V., “Methods of teaching English”; М.,1970,306p. 31.Harmer, Jeremy, “the practice English language teaching”; London-New York; Longman,1991,285p. 32.Handschin, Charles H., “Methods of teaching modern languages.”; N.Y.,World Book Co.,1926,288p. 33.BennettA, William Arthur., ”Aspects of Language and language teaching.”; London-New York., Cambridge univ. press, 1968,412p. 34http://www.indiana.edu/resources/ 35http://www.google.com/ 36http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/predicate and their use 37http://www.poetrymagic.co.uk/literary-theory Adapted from Teach Yourself Linguistics by Jean Aitchison (McGraw-Hill, 2003) Full-Text Online Librarywww.questia.com/Online_LibraryOnline library of books, journals, articles. Research online. Spoken English Lessonswww.alison.com/English-SpeakingVideo/Audio English Class w Cert Completely Free -Start Course Now! Summer Instituteced.berkeley.eduEnvironmental Design Summer Programs Immerse yourself in design culture (Mark Aronoff and Kirsten Anne Fudeman, What Is Morphology? WileyBlackwell, 2005) 77 Functional and Content Words 1. Resource Person: Sir Khalil Ahmad Presented by:- Maqsood Ahmad ID# 090418002 (MSc AL) University of Management and Technology Johar Town. Lahore. 78