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Posts Tagged ‘p-word’

Phrasal Verbs: The Elephant Is a Whole, Not Its Parts

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Although grammatical relationships among forms of lexemes are expressed through either inflection or periphrasis, English is a highly periphrastic language. According to the Oxford English Dictionary (2008), periphrasis is defined as “a phrase of two or more words used to express a grammatical relationship which would otherwise be expressed by the inflection of a single word.” Examples of periphrasis include [Read Full Article...]

With or Without a Complement: The Form and Function of Prepositions

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

“Prepositions are not words to end sentences with” reads the joke commenting on a prescriptive grammar rule for prepositions. According to scholar G.O. Curme in his Parts of Speech and Accidence published in 1935, the traditional definition of a preposition is “a word that indicates a relation between the noun or pronoun it governs and another word, which may be [Read Full Article...]

Linguistic Definition of Particle

Saturday, September 24th, 2011

Particles Particles in English grammar are function words that express grammatical relationships with other words. Function words perform definite grammatical functions but lack definite lexical meaning. Particle is a grammatical function. The grammatical form that can function as the particle in English grammar is the preposition. The prepositions of phrasal verbs, quasi-modal verbs, and some determiners function as particles. References [Read Full Article...]

Linguistic Definition of Infinitive Marker

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

Infinitive Markers Infinitive markers in English grammar are function words that distinguish the base forms from the infinitive forms of English verbs. Function words perform definite grammatical functions but lack definite lexical meaning. Infinitive marker is a grammatical function. The grammatical form that can function as the infinitive marker in English grammar is the preposition or p-word, specifically the preposition [Read Full Article...]