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13 - Word classes and phrases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 February 2023

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Summary

Introduction

One of the standard processes of any kind of language analysis is the identification and labelling of the individual words that make up a sentence or a text. Although this kind of analysis does not provide much helpful information about how texts or even sentences are constructed, a basic knowledge of ‘parts of speech’ provides the teacher with a useful tool. More useful still is to analyse the way that words group together into meaningful ‘chunks’ – or phrases.

Tasks

1 Word classes

Can you match the terms in this list with its definition below? The first is done for you.

  • a These typically provide information about the manner, place or time of the action expressed by the verb: quickly, away, just, soon … = adverbs

  • b These substitute for nouns: she, hers, anyone, who …

  • c These precede and help identify or quantify nouns: that, some, the, many …

  • d These typically name things, people or concepts, e.g. tree, teacher, style, Zen

  • e These relate nouns to other elements, typically in terms of time or place: in, after, by, under …

  • f These connect words or parts of sentences: and, while, if, because …

  • g These express processes, events or states: make, explode, become, weigh …

  • h These describe different qualities of nouns: green, noisy, expensive, boring …

2 Word classes

Now can you identify the class of each of the underlined words in this extract:

3 Words that belong to more than one class

Some words belong to more than one class. Identify the word class of each of the underlined items in these sentences from I Left My Grandfather’s House. The first has been done for you.

  • a I lay very flat and still in my bed. = adjective

  • The old ladies were still there. = adverb

  • b He lay on his back with his hands and legs thrown out carelessly. ‘

  • You’ll have to go back to Steyning.’

  • I went to the back door and knocked.

  • c If I could just stay here for the night and rest.

  • My aunt and Marjorie were going to help the rest of the household by clearing the table.

Type
Chapter
Information
About Language
Tasks for Teachers of English
, pp. 85 - 89
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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