We all do our research and put an effort in making a clear and an accurate presentation, but I'd be glad if this could help especially for those who are taking major in English and the like. Good luck!
A proper credit would be appreciated.
• Jay-ar A. Padernal, BSEd Major in English, University of Mindanao
2. GRAMMAR
is the study of the rules governing the use of a
given natural language, and, as such, is a field
of linguistics (the scientific study of language).
Traditionally, grammar included morphology
and syntax.
In modern liguistics these subfields are complemented
by phonetics, phonology, semantics and pragmatics.
3. Review: The Five Grammatical Units
Halliday’s Hierarchy
1. The Sentence: one or more clauses
2. The Clause: one or more phrases
3. The Phrase: one or more words
4. The Word: one or more morphemes
5. The Morpheme: the smallest unit in form and
meaning
Identify the Units: “The child found the puppy while he
was walking along the river.”
4. WHAT IS ‘SYNTAX’?
• Knowing a language includes the ability to
construct phrases and sentences/clauses out
of morphemes and words. The part of the
grammar that represents a speaker’s
knowledge of these structures and their
formation is called Syntax!
• In other words, syntax is the study of
sentence patterns of language.
5. The aim of this study is to show you what
syntactic structure is and what the rules that
determine syntactic structure are like.
What meant by structure here, is ‘word order’.
The meaning of a sentence depends on the
order in which words occur in a sentence.
6. Compare the following sentences:
I sing because I am happy.
I am happy because I sing.
The two sentences above have the same
categories and number of words, but
different in structure (words order); thus,
they have different meanings.
13. BASIC PHRASE STRUCTURE RULES:
S NP VP
NP (Det) (Adj) N (PP)
VP V (NP) (PP) (Adv)
PP P NP
14. Constituents
According to Syntax, the component parts of
the a sentence are called constituents, which
are the natural groupings of a sentence.
Each of them has:
1.Grammatical Category: whether it is a noun phrase, a
verb phrase, etc.
2.Grammatical Function: whether it is the subject,
object, or predicate, etc.
15. Grammatical Function & Category
The Subject: To study grammar is fun. [Category: Infinitive]
The Predicate: I cried. [Intransitive Verb]
The Subjective Complement: It was dark. [Adjective]
The Direct Object: He loves reading. [Gerund]
The Indirect Object: I gave the beggar a coin. [Noun Phrase]
The Objective Complement:
I found the box empty. [Adjective]
16. A Constituent is formed if…
1. Constituent can stand alone
Ex. “What did you find?” “A puppy.” (not “found a”)
2. Constituents can be replaced by one word
Ex. “Where did you find the puppy?”
“I found him along the river.”
3. Constituents move together
Ex. “It was the puppy that the child found.”
“The puppy was found by the child.”