7.Parts of Speech
Although many grammarians still cling to the Graeco-Latin tradition of dividing words into eight parts of speech, efforts have recently been made to reclassify English words on a different basis. The American linguist Charles Carpenter Fries, in his work The Structure of English (1952), divided most English words into four great form classes that generally correspond to the noun, verb, adjective, and adverb in the standard classification. He classified 154 other words as function words, or words that connect the main words of a sentence and show their relations to one another. In the standard classification, many of these function words are considered pronouns, prepositions, and conjunctions; others are considered adverbs, adjectives, or verbs.
- English Language
- 1.English Language.
- 2.Vocabulary
- 3.Spelling
- 4.Role of Phonemes
- 5.Stress, Pitches, and Juncture
- 7.Parts of Speech
- 8.Development of the Language
- 8.1.Old English Period
- 8.2.Middle English Period
- 8.3The Great Vowel Shift
- 8.4.Modern English Period
- 8.5.20Th-Century English
- 8.6.American English
- 8.7.Basic English
- 8.8.Pidgin English
- 9.Future of the English Language