PHRASES

1.) Noun Phrase (NP)

→ structure = d – m – h – q

→The tall girl is sitting here.

2.) Verb Phrase (VP)

→ auxiliary verb (more) + full verb (one)

→She goes home.FV

→ It will bereconstructed.AV+FV

3.) Prepositional Phrase→ consists of a preposition + prepositional complement

→The book is onthe table.PP=prep.+Cp

4.) Adjectival Phrase (AdjP)→ (may be) intensifier + adjective

→She is tall. / She is very tall.

5.) Adverbial Phrase (AdvP)→ (may be) intensifier + adverb

→It is hard. / It is much more harder.

CLAUSE ELEMENTS (vetné členy)

1.) Subject →S (kto? Čo?) – podmet tak ako v slovenčine

2.) Verb →V (čo robí? čo sa s ním deje?) – prísudok – v AN je to verb phrase

3.) Object

a)Object direct – Od – (koho? čo?) – there is just one Od in a sentence

– when there is an Oi after and Od it is an adverbial

– Igavea bookto him.( S V Od Adverbial)

b)Object indirect – Oi – (komu? čomu?) – always must precede object direct

– Od follows Oi

– Igavehima book.(S V Oi Od)

c) Object prepositional – Op – it is an Od with a preposition

– We are talking about him. Op

4.) Complement

a) Subject Complement – Cs– it has the same referent as Subject

– Cs always link with Subject with linking or copular verbs

= is, to be, became, turned, seems = just on verb

– Cs made either a NP or a AdjP

– Sheisa student.( S V Cs)

b)Object Complement – Co – it must always follow an Od

– IfindEnglisheasy.(S V Od Co)

5.) Adverbial → príslovkové určenie miesta, času, spôsobu, príčiny (Adverb = príslovka)

6.) Apposition→ prístavok →My older brother, Peter, is not here.

COUNT. / UNCOUNT.
Award / Air
Accident / Anger
Breath / Architecture
Bridge / Behaviour
Bottle / Cash
Candidate / Clothing
Coin / Cooking
Cough / Courage
Ceasefire / Education
Chair / Equipment
Drop / Engineering
Experiment / Fun
Exam / Flu
Fact / Harm
Finger / Information
Gadget / Lightering
Garment / Leisure
Guard / Laughter
Injury / Luck
Job / Luggage
Joke / Music
Journey / News
Kitchen / Peace
Plan / Permit
Permission / Poetry
Poem / Progress
Report / Research
Remark / Safety
Reaction / Travel
Smile / Traffic
Shower / Work
Suitcase / Water
Table / Weather
Thunderstorm / Warmth
Tune
University
Vehicle
Word

THE SYSTEM OF NOUN CLASSES

1.COMMON

COUNT

- concrete (table, book, pig, chair, bun)

-abstract (dead, mind, difficulty, dream)

UNCOUNT

-concrete (milk, butter, gold)

-abstract (music, passion, sadness, pain,

laziness, time, love feelings)

BOTH

-concrete (paper-material, stones)

-abstract (work, clothes)

2. PROPER(Henry, London, the Thames)

NOUNS THAT CAN TAKE –S GENITIVE

-we use -s genitive if it is about people

-it is a possessive, an inflected case

used with :

  • personal names(Peter´s brother)
  • personal nouns(student´s book)
  • collective nouns – when we mean people

(government’s decision)

  • higher animals(horse´s tail, dog´s food)
  • geographical names, institutional names

– when we mean people (London’s history)

  • temporal nouns (three week’s holiday)
  • some more nouns connected with

human activity(my garden’s duties)

  • following nouns – usually phrases:

sake, edge (God´s sake, forest´s edge)

SYSTEM OF ENGLISH PRONOUNS

1.CENTRAL PRONOUNS

Personal - I, me, you, he, she, it, they, them, us, him, her

Reflexive - myself, yourself, themselves

Possessive - my / mine, you / yours, their / theirs

2.RELATIVE PRONOUNS

-which, that – for inanimate

-who, whom – for animate

-whose – for both

3.INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS

-what, whom

-which – for inanimate

-who – for animate

4.DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS

-this, those, these, that

-they function as determiners or as functional pronouns

5.INDEFINITE PRONOUNS

-they have general meaning, they are non-specific

-most of them occurs in compounds

-they function as determiners or pronouns

A)personal – universal (both, each, every)

assertive (several, one) / non-assertive (any)

B) negative (nobody, neither)

CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF ADJECTIVES

- There are no special forms of adjectives,

but many of them can be identified by suffixes:

Ө, -able, -ful, -less, -ish, -ous, -al, -ic, -y

(comfortable, playful, useless, greyish, dangerous,

seasonal, scientific, dirty)

- Characteristic features of the adjectives can be:

1.)attributive position (as modified head)an ugly painting

2.)predicative function (Cs, Co) -- the painting is ugly

3.)some adjectives can be premodified by an intensifier

the children are very happy

4.)some adj can have comparative and superlative forms

– e.g. colours are disputable the children are happier now

There are central adjectives

– they function as attributive or predicative (pretty, tall)

and peripheral adjectives

– they can be only attributive(you poor man)or only predicative

(most common referring to the health of an animate being)

ADJECTIVES AND ADVERBS

- normally there is a regular difference of form between an adj. and an adver.

in that the adverb is distinguished by its –ly suffix

( a rapid car = adjective / he drove rapidly = adverb)

- some adjectives and adverbs have the same form without the –ly suffix

( Bill has a fast car= adjective / Bill drove fast = adverb )

- sometimes there is also an –ly adverb form but with a different meaning

Have you seen her lately?

- there are some words in –ly that can function both as adjectives and as adverbs

I caught an early train= adjective / We finished early today= adverb

- sometimes there are 2 forms – one is either adjective or adverb

and the other is an adverb with an –ly suffix

Take a deep breath= adjective / Breath deep= adverb / Breath deeply= adverb

ADJECTIVES AND NOUNS

nouns commonly function as premodifiers of other nouns,

but they do not share other characteristics of most adjectives:

a)there is no corresponding predicative function

(the bus station – NOT the station is bus)

b)they cannot be modified by very ( NOT a very bus station)

c)they can not take comparison (NOT a busser station)

d)there is an article contrast (the bus / a bus)

e)there is a number contrast (on bus / two busses)

f)there is a genitive inflection (the student’s essays)

g)there is a premodification by an adjective (the young student)

h)there is a correspondence to a propositional phrase

with the noun as complement garden tool – tools for the garden

CONVERSION – some items can be both adjectives and nouns

– they have the same form, but they are another word classes

a)there are some adjectives that are in noun form

He is a criminal. / This is the criminal record.

b)there are some nouns that function as adjectives

school x school yard

girl x girl friend

Worcester porcelain x this porcelain is Worcester

ADJECTIVES AND PARTICIPLES

there are many adjectives that have the same

suffixes as participles in –ing or –ed

--- they have a verb form --- boared / boaring

attributive - his views were surprising

predicative -his surprising views

  1. there are corresponding verb forms

amuse – amusing – amused

- when there is a corresponding verb, attributively

used –ed forms usually have a passive meaning

lost property – property that has been lost

  1. there are no corresponding verb forms

- they include forms in –ed that have no corresp. verbs

she is talented , she is gifted

the results were unexpected / the unexpected results

- when there are no corresponding verbs

– the forms are obviously not participles

  1. sometimes there are corresponding verb forms,

but they have different meaning

she is very calculating = adjective

she is calculating our salaries = participle

  1. some adjectives are compound

good-looking, heart-breaking, open-minded, easy-going

  1. some verbs have different forms for verbal use and for adj.

verbal use – he was drunk / adjective – I saw a drunken man

  1. some adjectives have pronunciation [ed]

beloved, aged, naked, witched

THE USE OF ARTICLES IN UNIQUE REFERENCE

→ all names, any kind of names

Personal names:

“zero” article

– usual (Peter, Paul Smith, Mr.Brown, Lady Di, George Bush)

– president + name (president Bush)

common nouns behave as proper nouns

–mother, father, sister → they behave as proper nouns

– calendar items – days, months, seasons, Christmas, Easter

“the” article– formally used (the Lady Di, the President)

–“the” Jane Brown – významná

“a” article – “a” Jane Brown – nejaká

Geographical names:

1.)if it is one name -“zero” article (Slovakia, Bratislava)

2.)if the names are in Plural -“the” article

(the Bahams, the Netherlands)

3.)of constructions -“the” article (the Isle of Man)

4.) the name consist of more words and one

is a common noun -„the“ article (the USA)

5.)names of institutions, streets

-might be broken(ComeniusUniversity)

6.)rivers -“the” article (the Danube)

7.)lakes -“zero” article (Lake Windermere)

8.)mountains -“zero” article (Mount Everest)

9.)mountain groups -“the” article (the High Tatras, the Alps)

MEANING OF GENITIVE

possessive genitive (Mrs Johnson´s coat. / The ship´s funnel.)

subjective genitive (Jane’s opinion. / The parents´ consent)

objective genitive (the family’s support)

genitive of origin (Dickens´ room)

descriptive genitive (children’s room)

genitive of measure – temporal (three-week’s holiday, three-kilo’s baby)

appositive genitive (the river of the Danube, the city of Bratislava)

genitive of attribute (The victim’s outstanding courage.)

the grammatical status of the G.

Genitives can function as:

a)determiners

My handsome cousin’s new briefcase.

That old gentleman’s son)

b)modifiers

They attend a women’s university.

She lives in a quaint old shepherd’s cottage.)

c)independent genitive

Jennifer’s is the only face I recognize

He has a devotion to work like his father’s.)

d)post-genitive / double-genitive

A sister of George’s is coming to stay with us.

GENERIC REFERENCE

B)COUNT NOUNS

-a tiger (any tiger)

-the tiger (one typical representative)

-tigers (most frequently used)

-limited grammar in generic reference

-“the…..of” constructions

(the students of university)

-“…..from” constructions

(students from Slovakia)

C)NON-COUNT NOUNS

-“I like….” constructions

-milk, water, chocolate, tea

NATIONALITIES

-the Slovaks are …

-the English are …

-Englishmen are …

D)ADJECTIVES AS A NP HEAD

- the rich are…→ whole class of rich people

-the evil is …

-the better is …

-the public is …

E)GENERAL SENSE

- very generally

the police, the countryside, the public

the press, the media, the seaside

SEMANTIC CLASSIFICATION OF ADJ.

stativexdynamic

-adjectives are characteristically stative

-dynamic are that, that are susceptible to

subjective measurement

-stative adjectives cannot be used with the

progressive aspect or with the imperative

He´s being tall –NOT Be tall!

- adjectives that can be used dynamically

include: brave, calm, cheerful, conceited, cruel,

foolish, friendly, funny, good, greedy,

jealous, naughty, noisy, tidy, helpful

gradable (descriptors) xnongradable (classifiers)

- farby → výnimka red--reder???

- most adjectives are gradable

- gradability is manifested through comparison

tall – taller – tallest

beautiful – more beautiful – most

- gradability is manifeste through modification

by intensifiers

very tall, so beautiful, extremely useful

- all dynamic and most stative adj. are gradable

- denominal adj. (atomic scientist) are nongradable

- adj. denoting provenance (British) are nongradable

inherent (pravý v.) xnon-inherent (prenesený v.)

inherent adj. applies to the referent of the object directly

a wooden cross= a cross made of wood

- the adjective has some type of metaphoric meaning

a wooden actor= the actor acts not naturally on stage

a perfect alibi / a perfect stranger

golden cross / a heart of gold