Like all phrases, the constituents of the English noun phrase can be analyzed into both functional constituents and formal constituents. From a functional point of view, the noun phrase has four major components, occurring in a fixed order:
- the determinative, that constituent which determines the reference of the noun phrase in its linguistic or situational context;
- premodification, which comprises all the modifying or describing constituents before the head, other than the determiners;
- the head, around which the other constituents cluster; and
- postmodification, those which comprise all the modifying constituents placed after the head.\
Notice that each functional component of a noun phrase (NP) can be further subclassified as we trace the diagram from left to right until we find that we have form classes (of the kind we discussed above) filling each constituent category.
That diagram is one way to represent the dual nature of a phrase. Each phrase, remember, is a merger of both form and function, and, as complex as it looks, the diagram illustrates only some of the complexities of the noun phrase in English. (For a more thorough treatment, see Halliday 1994 and Quirk et al. 1985.) Another way to illustrate some of the possible arrangements of form and function in the noun phrase is presented in the table below.
Some Examples of the Noun Phrase in English | ||||||
FUNCTION | Determiner | Premodifier | Head | Postmodifier | ||
(a) | lions | |||||
E | (b) | the | young | |||
X | (c) | the | information | age | ||
A | (d) | each | of the children | |||
M | (e) | some | badly needed | time | with the family | |
P | (f) | this | conclusion | to the story | ||
L | (g) | all my | children | |||
E | (h) | several | new mystery | books | which we recently enjoyed | |
S | (i) | such a | marvelous | data bank | filled with information | |
(j) | a | better | person | than I | ||
FORMS | Pronoun | Participle | Noun | Prepositional Phrase | ||
Article | Noun | Adjective | Relative Clause | |||
Quantifier | Adjective Phrase | Pronoun | Nonfinite Clause | |||
Complementation |
For example, the nursery rhyme "The House That Jack Built" plays on the process of embedding in English noun phrases. The nursery rhyme is one sentence that continuously grows by embedding more and more relative clauses as postmodifiers in the noun phrase that ends the sentence:
This is the house that Jack built.
This is the malt that lay in the house that Jack built.
This is the mouse that ate the malt that lay in the house that Jack built.
This is the cat that scared the mouse that ate the malt hat lay in the house that Jack built.
This is the dog that chased the cat that scared the mouse that ate the malt that lay in the house that Jack built.
This is the boy who loves the dog that chased the cat that scared the mouse that ate the malt that lay in the house that Jack built.
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar