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Chapter: 7 Structures of the Nominal Group Definition: <> The Nominal Group is a linguistic unit that has some of the characteristics of a noun. <> The nominal phrase or noun phrase has the noun or pronoun as the head. <> The Nominal Clause or noun clause is a clause that functions as a noun or a noun phrase. It may occur as a subject, object complement, in apposition or as a prepositional complement, e.g. nominal clause as a subject: What she said is awful. Nominal clause as an object: I don’t know what she said. See Examples (1-5) P. 135-136. <> Modification may occur in a noun phrase, a verb phrase, an adjectival phrase, etc. <> Modifiers that precede the head noun are called premodifiers. Modifiers that follow the head noun are called postmodifiers. Halliday uses the term qualifier for cases of postmodification. <> Modifiers can be realized by various word classes: determiners, adjectives and numerals, as premodifiers, and prepositional phrases as postmodifiers. <> Modifier can also be realized by a noun. Common examples of nouns as modifiers are found in everyday expressions like: art gallery, football field, grammar book, telephone number, etc. Logical and Experiential Functions: The logical function of the Nominal Group is realized in the sequencing of the Head noun and Modifiers. As for the experiential functions, there are six experiential functions that are realized in the Nominal Group. These are the Deictic, the Numerative, the Epithet, the Classifier, the Thing and the Qualifier. Deictic: Deictic is a term for a word or a phrase which directly relates a reference to a tie or place or person. The deictic function in the Nominal Group is realized by determiners: demonstratives like this, that, these and those, and also by the articles a, an, the. Deictics can be possessive nouns or pronouns, e.g. my book, your home. They can also be non specific items like, some, each, both, neither, all, every. Numerative: Numerative is a word of a phrase that refers to a number. Numeratives can be realized by numerals or expressions like many, several, few, lots of. Classifier and Epithet: Classifier: is a word in the noun phrase that puts the modified item into a subclass, distinguishing it from other subtypes. An Epithet indicates features or characteristics that do not put anything into a subset, not a subtype of a certain category, example: two new light switches. Light is the 1 classifier as it is the noun classifying the type of the switch. New, however, indicates the characteristic of the switch, not a subtype of it. <> You can distinguish an epithet from a classifier when you paraphrase the structure with Epithet in a be clause, e.g. The switches are new. The classifier cannot be rephrased in the same manner (*the switches are light). Thing: The thing in the functional analysis of the Nominal group differs from its literal meaning. It can here refer to inanimate or animate categories as well as to abstract concepts. Thing refers to the main item in the nominal group (the head). In "two new light switches", switches is the thing. Qualifier: A linguistic unit that is part of the nominal group; it follows the Head and gives more information on it (qualifies it). A qualifier is usually a prepositional phrase. The prepositional phrase can function as : As postmodifier/qualifier in a nominal group when functioning as an adjective: The woman, in the corner, is from Italy As an adjunct in a clause when functioning as an adverb (of time, frequency, degree and manner). Adjuncts are part of the basic structure of a clause or a sentence and modify the verb. See Fig. (7.1) – P. 140. <> When the prepositional phrase has the same reference as the head noun, it is said to be in apposition and has the function to qualify the Head. Apposition is the case where two words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence have the same reference … e.g. Kuwait, on the western bank of the Arabian Gulf, is a good place to live in. "Kuwait" and "on the western bank of the Arabian Gulf" are in apposition, i.e. they refer to the same entity. The prepositional phrase in this example functions as a qualifier/ postmodifier for the Nominal Group - the Head. In the following example the prepositional phrase serves a different function than qualifying the Head. "I stayed in Madinah for two weeks", here the prepositional phrase for two weeks is an adjunct. <> A good test to distinguish an Adjunct from a Postmodifier depends on the fact that the Adjunct can readily be moved, whereas the Postmodifier cannot. See Examples (6 & 7 VS 6a & 7a) – P. 141. Recursion: A prepositional phrase may have another prepositional phrase embedded in it and this pattern can be repeated (recurrent) within the embedded entity. See Fig. (7.4, 7.5 & 7.6) - PP. 142 – 145. 2 Paratactic and Hypotactic Nominal Group Complexes: When two or more Nominal Groups are combined as a single constituent to form a super Nominal Group and they have parallel or equal relation they are said to be a paratactic Nominal Group Complex. Hypotactic combinations refer to clauses that have dependent relations on one another. See Examples (11 – 15) – PP. 143 – 145. Chapter 8 : Rankshifted clauses <> A rank shifted clause is also referred to as an embedded clause. <> The clause which is inside another clause is the embedded (or rank shifted) clause. <> The clause which contains the embedded clause is the superordinate clause. <> From the logical point of view the rankshifted clause functions as a modifier. From the experiential point of view the rankshifted clause functions as modifier in premodification and qualifier in postmodification. <> The convention for symbolizing a rank shifted clause is the use of double square brackets [[ ]] enclosing a clause. See Fig(s) 8.1 - 8.5) – PP. 154-155. <> Rankshifted clauses are known as defining relative clauses or restrictive relative clauses. <> Full defining relative clauses contain a relative pronoun. This may be a whpronoun (who, whom, which, whose, where, when or that). In some relative clauses the relative pronoun can be omitted and the clause is termed a reduced relative clause. <> In writing, the defining relative clause is NOT separated from the Head it restricts by a comma, e.g. The woman whom he married was his childhood classmate. <> In a non-defining relative clause, also called a non-restrictive relative clause, additional information is given on the Head noun without restricting or defining it. In such instances commas are used to separate the non-defining relative clause: Professor Khalid, who is a friend of mine, wrote three books on medicine. <> Any common noun, and some pronouns can be modified by a defining relative clause. The Nominal Group which contains the relative clause may realize any function normally open to Nominal Groups. See examples (3 – 6 / P. 156) where the relative clause is between brackets and the grammatical function of the relative clause is given between parenthesis. <> The relative pronoun itself can function as modifier (whose) or adjunct (where, when). 3 <> Omitted relative pronoun (zero pronoun option). <> Some relative pronouns cannot be omitted (See examples 13 - 14 / P. 157) where the relative pronouns cannot be omitted. However, in the examples (8b & 15-17/ P. 157) the use of the relative pronoun is optional. This is called the zero pronoun option. The meaning remains the same whether the relative pronoun is used or omitted. Relative with prepositions: Although grammar offers these possibilities, stylistics and registers determine which option is chosen. Churchill was reprimanded for ending his statements with prepositions. He finished the book "in which" he put forward a new theory. * He finished the book which he put forward a new theory in. Non-finite relative clauses: Non finites can be used in relative clauses. Non finites are the infinitives (used with to) and the participles (present ending with –ing functioning as an adjective and past ending with -ed) See examples (22 – 26 / P. 160) where the bracketed structures are non-finite clauses. Multiple Embedding of Clauses: Clauses may have multiple embedding. Embedding occurs with binding conjunctions or binders like when, because, unless, that is binding a dependent clause to an independent one. Rank shifted clauses as subject or complement: <> It is possible for a rankshifted clause to stand in for the whole of a Nominal Group as subject of a clause. See Fig. (8.9 ( 8.10) – P. 163 – 164), where the embedded (rankshifted) clause is the subject of the superordinate clause. <> Besides functioning as Subject, rankshifted clauses can also function as complement (See example (34) & Fig. (8.11) – P. 164. Non-finite clauses as subject or complement: Non finite clauses can realize the subject or complement Function (See examples (35 37) & Fig. (8.12) – P. 165. Extraposition: <> Extraposition is the process of moving a word, a phrase, or a clause to a position in a sentence which is different from the position it usually has. Extraposition can function as a rankshifting strategy. See examples (33 – 33b / P. 166). In the first example rankshifting occurs through the use of the binder that at the beginning of the sentence. In the second example, the empty pronoun it stands in and 4 holds the fort until the real information about the subject comes along in the shape of the rankshifted clause. It is called the anticipatory subject and the rankshifted clause here is the postponed subject. (Aristotle’s arguments appealed to logic. This is not surprising). Extraposition: (see P. 257). Non-finite rankshifted clauses can be extraposed ( See examples (41 – 43) – P. 167. Other Rankshifted clauses: <> Some adjectives permit clause embedding ( See examples at the top of P. 168). <> Rankshifted clauses can be embedded in comparative adverbial groups ( See examples in the middle of P. 168). <> Rankshifted clauses can also postmodify adverbs and adjectives that are premodified by too OR so ( See examples in the middle of P. 168). 5