Word classes (Parts of speech) A word class (or form class) is a group of words behaving in the same way grammatically, particularly morphologically: using the same (inflectional) endings and thereby revealing their word class, and syntactically (i.e. assuming the same position within a sentence). Nouns Nouns are words used for naming some living creature (person, animal, mythological being, etc.), object (thing, plant, product, etc.), place, abstract quality (strength), concept (morpheme), action (a run), etc. Syntactically, nouns are heads of noun phrases and are often preceded by determiners (a, the, some, any); they function as the subject, object, or complement of a clause. Grammatically, nouns can express differences between the singular and plural number by changing their form (as well as between the common and possessive/genitive case). There are three basic classifications of nouns which bring the following divisions: ˙ proper nouns and common nouns; ˙ common nouns have count (countable) and noncount (uncountable) subtypes; ˙ common nouns (count as well as noncount) can be concrete or abstract. ˙ Proper and common nouns Proper nouns designate specific people, places (towns, villages, countries, mountains, rivers, etc.), times (holidays), events , works of art (films, books, compositions, etc.), organisations, and so on. Proper nouns differ from common nouns in the following: - proper nouns in a written form have an initial capital letter; - they can stand alone as a clause element (i.e. without a determiner): e.g. Peter lives in Prague, which usually is not the case with common nouns (it is possible with noncount nouns: Life is good, but Would you like some wine? Count nouns need to take a determiner: The girl is pretty, We have a plan, etc.); - proper names do not usually have plural forms (*Britains), whereas common nouns usually do (countable nouns: cars, boys; however, most uncountable nouns do not allow a plural: *airs, *satisfactions). ˙ Count and noncount (mass) common nouns Count nouns refer to individual, countable entities. They cannot stand alone in the singular, they take an indefinite (a table) or a definite article (the table). Count nouns allow a plural (tables, cats). Noncount (also mass) nouns refer to an undifferentiated mass or notion (iron, love, advice). They may occur with some (some water) or the (the advice), but they do not allow a plural form (*informations). Some nouns can be both count and noncount, as the meaning differs (experience = zkušenost: Does he have enough experience?; experience = zážitek: He told us about his experiences.) ˙ Concrete and abstract nouns Concrete nouns refer to observable and measurable entities (cow, hill, water). Abstract nouns refer to unobservable notions which cannot be measured (kindness, option, progress, education). Abstract nouns can be both noncount (patience, medicine) or count (problem, debate). There are typical suffixes which create concrete nouns from: - nouns: -er (potter), -ess (lioness), -ette (usherette), -let (piglet), -ling (gosling), -ster (roadster); - nouns and adjectives: -ese (Japanese), -(i)an (beautician), -ist (fundamentalist); - verbs: -er (killer, reader), -or (sailor, terminator), -ee (devotee, trainee); and typical suffixes which form abstract nouns from: - nouns: -dom (kingdom), -ful (handful), -hood (childhood), -(e)ry (adultery), -ing (wiring), -ism (impressionism), -ship (friendship) - adjectives: -ity (scarcity), -ness (loneliness) - verbs: -al (approval), -(a/i)tion (confirmation), -ing (singing), -ment (development). English nouns are characterized by the grammatical features of number, countability, definiteness, case, and gender. Compared with Czech, no declension pattern is used in English, but countability and definiteness (given by the context) are distinguished in addition. Number Most English nouns have both a singular ("one") and plural ("more than one") form. These are variable nouns. Invariable nouns do not express a contrast in number. ˙ Variable nouns, when they change singular to plural, form a - regular plural form: by adding -s or -es (after the sibilants -s, -z, -x, -ch, -sh; after some nouns ending -o: potatoes, heroes, tomatoes, but: studios, kilos, radios, volcano(e)s, etc.; after nouns ending in a consonant + -y, where -y is replaced by -i-: studies, ladies); - irregular plural form, achieved by: - change of vowel (mutation/umlaut): man(r)men, woman(r) women, foot(r)feet, tooth(r)teeth, - adding -en (sometimes with a change of vowel, too): ox(r)oxen, child(r)children;, - changing the final fricative -f(-) to -v- and adding [z]: wife(r)wives, loaf(r)loaves; - however, some cases allow both the regular and irregular plural: scarf(r)scarfs/scarves, dwarf(r)dwarfs/dwarves, hoof(r)hoofs/hooves, truth(r)truths, etc.; - using foreign plural endings: Latin: fungus(r)fungi, larva(r)larvae, medium(r)media, index(r)indices, Greek: criterion(r)criteria, crisis(r)crises, French: chateau(r)chateaux, etc. Often such foreign-based nouns use the regular plural ending as an alternative (forum(r)fora/forums), or in a different sense (medium(r)mediums x media), or as the only possible ending (prefix(r)prefixes). ˙ Invariable nouns are divided into: ˙ singular-only: - noncount nouns (love, music); - proper nouns (Spain, Prague, Havel); - names of subjects (mathematics, stylistics), diseases (mumps, measles), and games (darts, billiards), where the -s ending is misleading; ˙ plural-only - collective nouns whose form looks singular (police, cattle, people, poultry, folk); - nouns naming two-part items (trousers, scissors, glasses); - nouns lacking the singular and ending in -s (thanks, outskirts, annals); ˙ double-plural: such nouns allow both the regular plural ending in -s and the zero plural, i.e. one without an ending (to see two ducks x go shooting duck - the meaning is ´a category of game´, not individual animals). Some semantically variable nouns have the same form for singular and plural: - some names of animals (sheep, deer, fish); - nationality nouns (identical with adjectives) (Japanese, Swiss, Swedish); - nouns with equivocal number (series, aircraft); - quantitative nouns (dozen, quid, p (= pence)); - some collective nouns (staff, crew). Countability Countable nouns denote separate entities, contrary to uncountable/noncount/mass nouns which denote an undifferentiated mass. Partitives Partitive constructions enable both count and noncount nouns express the part-whole relation. They allow noncount nouns to express number since partitives are usually countable nouns denoting a part (piece, kind, sort, ...), combined with of + a noncount noun. Partitive expressions relate to quantity or quality, and they may be singular or plural.[1] Partitive constructions contain partitive nouns of several types: ˙ general partitives (a piece of cake/metal/advice/music) ˙ typical partitives (a bar of soap/chocolate, a ) ˙ measure partitives (a pint of beer, a barrel of oil, an ounce of gold, a kilo of sugar) Some partitives are used to refer to the plural (a pride of lions, a skulk of foxes, a flock of birds, a crowd of people, a swarm of flies, a covey of partridges). Reclassification Reclassification is another way of transforming noncount nouns into count: noncount cheese, beer, coffee, fish, etc. are extended by the plural inflection. The plural forms then either mean ´different types/sorts/varieties, etc. of´ (Bohemian beers, the selected coffees, the fishes of the Caribbean) or plural number (three coffees < ellipted and adapted from three cups of coffee). Definiteness Definiteness conveys the information whether the referent of a noun is o general o individual - specific, identifiable (r) referred to by the definite article. - non-specific Definiteness is signalled by the use of determiners[2] (articles and pronouns). Reference, carried out by determiners, is of two types:[3] ˙ generic (count nouns can be both singular and plural; both the definite and indefinite article is used in the singular: a/the banker must be honest, bankers must be honest); ˙ specific - definite (reference through the definite article in count, as well as noncount nouns: the boy, the boys, the music) - indefinite (definite articles are not used: a boy, boys, some boys; water, some water). Case Modern English only has two cases: - the common case - the noun han no specific ending, - the genitive (adnominal, possessive) case, also called the Saxon genitive - formed by adding the grammatical morpheme ´s to the singular of a noun. In plurals which are formed regularly an -s ending is already used, so the genitive case is marked in writing by adding the apostrophe (the ladies´ voices). Irregular plural forms add ´s (children´s literature). The genitive mainly expresses - possession (Paul´s office), but other meanings are expressed too, particularly:[4] - subjective (my sister´s approval < My sister approves of it.) - objective (the official´s removal < They removed the official / The official was removed from his office.) - origin (Faulkner´s novels < novels written by Faulkner) - descriptive (children´s book) - quantity (two weeks´ holiday < holiday lasting two weeks) Gender English nouns (and pronouns) do not have grammatical gender (masculine, feminine; sometimes neuter) as these word classes have in Czech, German, French, Spanish, etc. The grammatical gender groups nouns into gender classes according to their endings or the way they pattern with other words in the noun phrase. It is sometimes based on the natural gender (Cz. muž - masculine), but not necessarily (Cz. děvče or Ger. das Mädchen - neuter). A large group of nouns in such languages cannot reflect any biological sex of their referents, thus their gender is purely grammatical (Cz. stůl - masculine, Cz. židle - feminine). English gender is notional and it often identifies natural gender, distinguishing: - animate beings x inanimate entities - personal beings x nonpersonal beings - male sex x female sex. ˙ Inanimate nouns are referred to by pronouns it and which. (There is a book on the table. It is the book which my parents gave me.) Sometimes inanimate nouns are given feminine (cars and lorries, boats and ships, guns, countries, e.g. Italy protects her cultural heritage.) or masculine gender (computers, electronic devices) `a personification.mostly as a result of intimate, affectionate attitude to the entities referred to. ˙ Animate nouns pattern with he/she and who. They are of two types: ˙ personal animate nouns - referring to males and females and patterning with he/she and who; these are either two different lexical units (father - mother, wizard - witch), or morphologically differentiated nouns (mostly marked by a feminine derivational suffix: actor - actress, duke - duchess, but exceptionally even by a masculine one: widow - widower), or dual gender nouns (they can be referred both by he or she: student, teacher, cousin, friend, doctor, etc.). ˙ nonpersonal animate nouns - referring to animals. Thy mostly pattern with it and which, but some, usually those referring to big animals or to farm and pet animals, take he/she and who. Animal names either have an undifferentiated form (rat, spider, salmon), or compound forms for sexes (elephant bull - elephant cow, he-goat - she-goat, tomcat - cat), or derived female forms (lion - lioness, tiger - tigress), or lexically distinct male and female naming units (bull - cow, drake - duck, cock - hen). Common gender enables to refer to the nouns such as baby, cat, bird by he, she and it according to the emotional attitude to the referent. Collective nouns in British English (army, government, family, committee, etc.) take either singular pronoun reference it and which, or plural they and who, depending on whether rather the unity of the collective body or the individuality of its members are stressed. Adjectives Adjectives are words expressing features or qualities of nouns or pronouns. Adjectives can appear in three positions: ˙ attributive - before a noun or pronoun which they (pre)modify (good life); ˙ predicative - they function as subject or object complements after a verb (It seems reasonable); ˙ postpositive - they follow the modified noun or pronoun (usually a compound indefinite pronoun or adverb) (somewhere cheaper, anybody responsible) Adjectives using the same suffixes as verbal participles ending in -ing or -ed are called participial adjectives. They can be used both attributively (borrowed money, looking glass) and predicatively ( ). Most adjectives can be compared (hard - harder - the hardest, useful - more useful - the most useful). Many adjectives form adverbs by adding the suffix -ly: free `a freely, willing `a willingly). Gradability as the typical feature of adjectives is achieved by - modification by intensifiers (very young, so expensive, awfully hot); - comparison. The exception are adjectives denoting - absolute properties (dead, straight, ultimate, final) - material (metal, glass) - provenance (Czech, French). The comparison (i.e. expressing higher degree) is done by: - adding inflections to the base (= absolute) form of an adjective (-er to produce the comparative and -est to produce the superlative form), used in majority of one- and two-syllable adjectives (exceptions: right -*righter, real - *realer, proper - *properer; verbal participles used adjectively: *boreder, *freezingest); - using paraphrase (a periphrastic/syntactic way), i.e. adding more for the comparative and most for the superlative form - used in three-syllable and longer adjectives. Many two-syllable adjectives allow two forms: more common and commoner, more quiet and quieter (also happy, modern, clever, etc.). Types of adjectives:[5] ˙ central - adjectives functioning in both attributive or predicative positions; ˙ peripheral - adjectives occurring in only one of the positions (predicative only: utter, afraid, alive). ˙ inherent - adjective applying directly to the referent of the object modified by the adjective (a hot cake is a hot object - unlike hot news, a firm gate is a firm object - unlike a firm friend where that person´s friendship is firm, not he/she himself); ˙ non-inherent - adjectives expressing indirect characterisation of the referent (e.g. hot news and a firm friend quoted above, a poor player - the person´s play is poor, not the person) ˙ stative - adjectives are mostly stative (but many can be seen as dynamic). Stative adjectives cannot be used with the progressive aspect or the imperative (*The bag is being heavy. *Be white.) ˙ dynamic - the adjectives denote the qualities which are controllable by the possessor; they are subjectively measurable. They can be restricted in their duration, and so they can be used with the progressive aspect (The children are being noisy.) and the imperative (Don´t be cruel.) ˙ Some adjectives can be used both as stative and dynamic, such as brave, calm, cruel, foolish, funny, good, greedy, helpful, naughty, noisy, tidy, etc. Many nouns can appear in a typically adjectival position: before other nouns (they pre-modify heads in noun phrases, i.e. they function as attrributes). They lose some properties of nouns (e.g. they are not able to form the plural: *cars shop; their syntactic position is rather adjectival than substantival), but they are not adjectives yet (e.g. comparison is not possible: *lorrier/*the lorriest driver). Pronouns Pronouns are words that stand for a noun, a noun phrase or several noun phrases. Pronouns expressing contrasts in the grammatical categories of person, gender and number, are called the central pronouns; their subclasses are:[6] ˙ personal - identify the person(s) speaking,,addressed and not present in the act of communication (I, you, he, she, it, we, they; in religion and some dialects the archaic 2^nd person forms thou, thee, thy, thine, thyself are still used); ˙ reflexive - refer to or reflect the noun or pronoun in positions different from the subject position (Help yourselves); suffix -self in the singular and -selves in the plural is added; ˙ possessive - express possession, ownership. They assume two forms: determiner (used before a noun in noun phrases, e.g., my brother, our new camera), and pronoun used on its own, not as part of a noun phrase with a head (Whis bag is yours? Hers is green.) Other subclasses of pronouns: ˙ demonstrative - convey the contrast between ´close´and ´distant´ entities (this/these, that/those), but also have other uses, e.g. to introduce a new topic (And then we came to this club ...) or to show a negative attitude - anger, disapproval, etc. (That bastard!); ˙ interrogative - used to ask questions about personal and nonpersonal nouns (who?, whom?, whose?, which?, what?); ˙ relative - link a subordinate clause to the head noun of a noun phrase (who, whom, whose, which, that: He´s the man who supported our parents, Mother gave me advice that explained everything.); ˙ reciprocal - express a two-way relationship (each other, one another); ˙ indefinite - express a notion of quantity (some, any, somebody, anybody, something, both); they are either compound (of two elements: some-/any-/every-/no- + -body/-one/-thing), or of the of-type: such pronouns can stand alone or are followed by of (all students / all of us, some girls / some of the girls). Here belong pronouns all, both, each, few/fewer, little/less, much/many/more/most, some, none, neither). These pronouns are also called quantifiers. Personal pronouns manifest three forms, similar to case forms in inflectional languages: - subjective (formerly nominative) form (I, you, he, she, we, they); - genitive form ((r) possessive pronouns + whose); - objective (formerly accusative) form - this form is not used in nouns any longer; pronouns use it when they are the object of a clause (Mother asked me) or when they are governed by a preposition (They left without him). Such a form exists in pronouns I/me, he/him, she/her, we/us, they/them and who/whom. Verbs Verb is a word class which expresses an action (play, drive), event (blink,slide) or state (concern, remember). Verbs express contrasts of tense, aspect, voice, mood, person (similar to pronouns) and number (similar to nouns). Verbs in English may be used in the form of a single word (She left. Run!), but, due to the analytic character of English, also as a cluster of verbs, i.e. a verb phrase (When did she leave? He will run in the race. He must have been running for half an hour.) . A verb phrase consists of a main verb and one or more auxiliary verbs. There are three main classes of verb:[7] ˙ lexical verbs (full verbs): they have a clearly identifiable meaning (denotation) and act as main verbs; they belong to content/lexical words (write, help); ˙ modal verbs: they express judgements about the probability of events or states; they are only auxiliary and their meaning is much vaguer, more abstract and more difficult to define than that of lexical/content verbs. Modal verbs: can/could, may/might, must, will/would, shall/should, need(n´t), dare, ought to, used to. ˙ primary verbs: they function either as main verbs (We have a car. He did exercises. The wind is very strong.) or auxiliary verbs (I have heard it. Did you get it? The wind is blowing.) Verbal forms and phrases are of two types: ˙ finite forms: the verbs are limited by the inflection (grammatical ending) used to a particular number, person, tense, or mood. In verb phrases, the finite form is the first verb, i.e. the auxiliary (She has been invited.). The finite forms: the -s form, the past form (-ed in regular verbs), and the base form used to express the present tense. ˙ nonfinite forms: no limitation to a particular number, person, tense, or mood is imposed on the verbs (I am working. He has been working. We will be working. She could have been working.). The nonfinite forms: the --ing participle, the --ed participle, the base form used as an infinitive (after most verbs marked by particle to). Stative and dynamic senses of verbs Verbs with stative senses are generally not used in the progressive form. Verbs with dynamic senses are regularly used in the imperative and progressive forms, unlike verbs with stative senses which cannot. Verbs may shift from stative to dynamic sense or vice versa (stative sense: We have a nice flat, dynamic sense: We usually have meetings on Monday). Classification of verbs according to the stative and dynamic senses[8]: ˙ stative ˙ stance -- between stative and dynamic verbs ˙ dynamic durative ˙ dynamic punctual - momentary events and acts - transitional events and facts Transitivity Transitivity is the syntactic property of verbs characterized by taking a direct object. ˙ intransitive verbs ˙ transitive verbs ˙ monotransitive verbs -- they require a direct object (a noun phrase, a finite clause, or a non-finite clause) ˙ ditransitive verbs -- they are complemented by two object noun phrases: an indirect object (usually placed first) and a direct object. Most ditransitive verbs can be monotransitive as well. Copular verbs (= linking/equative verbs) ˙ current copulas ˙ resulting copulas Phrasal verbs are multi-word lexemes consisting of a verb followed by a particle or particles. The particles can be ˙ adverbs ˙ prepositions ˙ words capable of being both adverbs and prepositions Tense Time is the objective reality, a line on which the present moment is located in continuous motion, enabling comparison with what is ahead of it (the future) and behind it (the past). Tense is a grammatical category classifying the objective time, realized by inflection in verbs. English has two tenses clearly conveyed by verb inflection: ˙ the present tense and the past/preterite tense, but, as there exists no inflected future form of verbs, ˙ the future tense is expressed by e.g. - the combination of the auxiliary will/shall + base form (infinitive) of a verb - the present simple (The train arrives at six.) - the present progressive (I am flying to Chicago next week.) - the construction be going to + base form (infinitive) of a verb (I am going to ask her.), - the construction will/shall + the progressive (We´ll be watching their actions.) - the construction be (about) to + base form (infinitive) of a verb (He is to be appointed Executive Director.I´m about to leave.). English also has pre-tenses (the past perfect, the present perfect, the future perfect) and progressive/continuous forms, which are used to express aspect. Voice Voice is a grammatical means which varies the relationship between subject and object in a verb. Two voices are thus contrasted: o the active (My uncle built the house.) o the passive (The house was built by my uncle.) Aspect Aspect is a grammatical category reflecting the way in which the action of a verb is viewed in respect to time. Two aspects are recognized in English: - the perfect - the progressive. The aspects are marked for present or past tense and they may combine. Most Czech verbs, unlike the English ones, are marked for aspect: tleskat × tlesknout/zatleskat, jíst × sníst. Some verbs ending in -ovat (obětovat) and foreign words ending in -ovat (informovat, delegovat, etc.) do not express aspect, but verb morphology possesses means which make it possible (poinformovat x informovávat). English equivalents to Czech aspectually differentiated verb forms are partly expressed by means of: - progressive form - adverbs and adverbial particles (sednout si - to sit down) - different lexical means (dopsat - to finish writing) - verbo-nominal phrases (projít se - to take a walk) - auxiliary verbs will, would, used to (sedávali - they used to sit) - prefixed verbs - quite rarely (attest, enslave) Mood Mood are attitudes of fact, wishes, posibility, etc. expressed by a verb or a clause. The traditional moods are: o indicative -- it expresses objective statements (We learn English.) o imperative -- it expresses a command (Stop here!) o conditional -- it expresses hypothesis or condition (We would try it if ...) o subjunctive -- it expresses doubt, tentativeness (Were he a better student, ...) o interrogative -- it is a verb form (or a type of sentence) expressing a question Deutschbein´s semantic classification of moods[9] included: ˙ the cognitive - the indicative - the irrealis - the potentialis ˙ the optative - the permissive ˙ the voluntative - the adhortative ˙ the expectative - the dubitative Adverbs Adverbs are elements of clause structure which mostly contribute to the meaning of the verb (He went abroad. The CEO will resign tomorrow.), but also to some other adjacent element (adjective: extremely important; pronoun: hardly anyone; numeral: almost twenty, noun: quite a number, a step back, adverb: very carefully) or to the clause as a whole. Most adverbs are formed by adding the derivational suffix -ly to an adjective (clearly, anonymously) - theses are open-class adverbs. Some adverbs have no distinct morpheme (no, now, very, just - closed-class adverbs), others are compound (sometimes, elsewhere) or derived by other suffixes (backwards, street-wise). Morphologically, adverbs are split into:[10] ˙ simple adverbs (only, just, near, far, back, up, under); ˙ compound adverbs (whenever, everywhere, sometime, therefore) ˙ derivational adverbs (frankly, unwillingly, southward, French-style) Adverbs function either as adverbials, i.e. elements of clause structure (contributing to the meaning of verbs, but also to other clause elements or to the whole clause: Surprisingly, he didn´t remember our faces.), or they affect the meaning of the word or phrase they are attached to: such adverbs are modifiers of verbs and adjectives (e.g. intensifiers or emphasizers: very, deeply, extremely, just, really, e.g. very useful, strongly convinced). Syntactically, adverbials occur in four types: ˙ adjuncts - integrated within the clause structure (He returned home quickly.) ˙ subjuncts - (They have already asked their neighbours.) ˙ disjuncts - express an evaluation of what is being said, either with respect to the form of the communication or its meaning (Unfortunately, she ignored him. John is probably the best dancer.) ˙ conjuncts - express the speaker´s assessment of the relation between two linguistic units (We do not have enough money, so we can´t lend you.) Prepositions Prepositions express a relationship between parts of a sentence, usually as to the time and space. Formally, prepositions are divided into: ˙ single-word prepositions (in, at, to, by, with, of, over, under, since, after, through; a closed-set word class); ˙ multi-word prepositions (due to, because of, instead of; on behalf of, in compliance with). Conjunctions Conjunctions join clauses or parts of clauses through coordination and subordination. ˙ Coordinating conjunctions link syntactic elements which have the same status within a sentence (e.g. two clauses, two phrases, two words of the same form class). They express such relations as ˙ addition and sequence (and); ˙ alternatives (or); ˙ contrast (but). ˙ Subordinating conjunctions join units with a different grammatical status in a sentence, i.e. one clause is subordinated to another (stands for a clause element). The following types are distinguished: conjunctions of ˙ time (until, when, before, as soon as) ˙ place (where) ˙ condition (if, in case that) ˙ purpose (in order to, so that) ˙ reason and cause (because, as, since) ˙ concession (although, though, in spite of) Numerals Numerals are in some respect similar to central adjectives: they can be used both attributively (the three boys) and predicatively (My grandmother is seventy.) However, they can neither compare, nor take -ly to form adverbs. The main types of numerals are: ˙ cardinal numerals (six, twenty-three) ˙ ordinal numerals (the sixth, the twenty-third) ------------------------------- [1] Greenbaum, S., Quirk, R.: A Student´s Grammar of the English language, pp. 71-72. [2] See 8.8. Other word classes: Determiners. [3] For more see Hladký, J., Růžička, M.: A Functional Onomatology of English, pp. 50-53. [4] Cf. Hladký, J., Růžička, M.: A Functional Onomatology of English, p. 53. [5] Leech, G., Svartvik, J.: A Communicative Grammar of English, pp. 135-147. [6] Crystal, D.: The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, p. 210. [7] Crystal, D.: The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, p. 212. [8] Greenbaum, S., Quirk, R.: A Student´s Grammar of the English language, pp. 55-56. [9] quoted from Hladký, J., Růžička, M.: A Functional Onomatology of English, pp. 76-77.