Theoretical English Grammar. Part 1. Morphology. Бочарова М.В. - 37 стр.

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(To) jump, (a) jump.
B. The formal morphological principle only:
Desk(s), gardener(s/ -‘s/ -s’), milk, honesty, police; wooden, quick(er);
work(ed/ -ing/ -s), hit(-ting/ -s); yesterday, sometimes; in, before, yet.
C. The Functional syntactic principle only:
Subject Predicate Object Adverbial
I
Someone
The bike
Yours
Nick
Who
saw
has bought
is new.
is a nice car.
had to go
said
him
this book.
it?
there yesterday.
to the library.
Task 5. In the passage below, identify the class each word belongs to:
o lexical words (parts of speech proper) – a noun, a lexical verb, an adjective,
an adverb, a pronoun or a numeral;
o function words – a preposition, a conjunction etc.; or
o words outside the sentence structure/ inserts, e.g. parenthetical elements.
A: Um can you get me a screw driver?
B: Where?
A: Uh well just bring my tool box.
B: Oh okay. Wow. Be careful. We’re gonna have to take off the light fixture…
Do circuits run back there?
A: Yep.
B: Okay. Move this. You want me to take off this? Ouch!
A: you okay?
B: Yeah. I guess I should put on shoes.
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   (To) jump, (a) jump.
B. The formal morphological principle only:
   Desk(s), gardener(s/ -‘s/ -s’), milk, honesty, police; wooden, quick(er);
   work(ed/ -ing/ -s), hit(-ting/ -s); yesterday, sometimes; in, before, yet.
C. The Functional syntactic principle only:
       Subject          Predicate               Object           Adverbial
            I              saw                    him         there yesterday.
      Someone          has bought              this book.
      The bike            is new.
          Yours       is a nice car.
          Nick          had to go                              to the library.
          Who              said                   it?


Task 5. In the passage below, identify the class each word belongs to:
o lexical words (parts of speech proper) – a noun, a lexical verb, an adjective,
an adverb, a pronoun or a numeral;
o function words – a preposition, a conjunction etc.; or
o words outside the sentence structure/ inserts, e.g. parenthetical elements.


A: Um can you get me a screw driver?
B: Where?
A: Uh well just bring my tool box.
B: Oh okay. Wow. Be careful. We’re gonna have to take off the light fixture…
Do circuits run back there?
A: Yep.
B: Okay. Move this. You want me to take off this? Ouch!
A: you okay?
B: Yeah. I guess I should put on shoes.




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