Noun Phrases: Difference between revisions
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An NP can occur | An NP can occur | ||
*As the subject, i.e. at the beginning of a sentence before a verb as in: | *As the subject, i.e. at the beginning of a sentence before a verb as in: <span style="color: blue>[<sub>NP</sub>The student] is working hard.</span> | ||
*As the direct object, i.e. after a transitive verb as in: Chris met/ | *As the direct object, i.e. after a transitive verb as in: <span style="color: blue>Chris met [<sub>NP</sub>the student] yesterday.</span> | ||
*Following a preposition, as in: Pat talked about | *Following a preposition, as in: <span style="color: blue>Pat talked about [<sub>NP</sub>the student] again .</span> | ||
*In front of the possessive 's, i.e. in: | *In front of the possessive 's, i.e. in: <span style="color: blue> [<sub>NP</sub>the student] 's car broke.</span> | ||
An NP can be substituted by a personal pronoun (I, she, him, it, ...) | An NP can be substituted by a personal pronoun (<span style="color: blue>I, she, him, it, ...</span>) | ||
The internal structure of a noun phrase | === The internal structure of a noun phrase === | ||
* An NP must contain a noun | * An NP must contain a noun | ||
* An NP can contain: | * An NP can contain: | ||
** exactly one determiner at the beginning of the NP | ** exactly one determiner at the beginning of the NP | ||
** an arbitrary number of adjectives before the N | ** an arbitrary number of adjectives before the N | ||
** an arbitrary number of preposition phrases (PP) after the N | ** an arbitrary number of preposition phrases (PP) after the N | ||
** one or more sentences at the end of the NP | ** one or more sentences at the end of the NP. | ||
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[[Phrases| ← Phrases]] [[Verb_Phrases|Verb Phrases →]] | |||
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Latest revision as of 09:37, 26 April 2017
The Noun Phrase (NP)
The distribution of the noun phrase
An NP can occur
- As the subject, i.e. at the beginning of a sentence before a verb as in: [NPThe student] is working hard.
- As the direct object, i.e. after a transitive verb as in: Chris met [NPthe student] yesterday.
- Following a preposition, as in: Pat talked about [NPthe student] again .
- In front of the possessive 's, i.e. in: [NPthe student] 's car broke.
An NP can be substituted by a personal pronoun (I, she, him, it, ...)
The internal structure of a noun phrase
- An NP must contain a noun
- An NP can contain:
- exactly one determiner at the beginning of the NP
- an arbitrary number of adjectives before the N
- an arbitrary number of preposition phrases (PP) after the N
- one or more sentences at the end of the NP.