Practical Grammar 6: Difference between revisions

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Here are some comments on the functions other than SUBJ and OBJ:
Here are some comments on the functions other than SUBJ and OBJ:


* OBJ-THEME: the GF of the second NP object of a ditransitive verb like ''give'' or ''show''
* OBJ-THEME: the GF of the second NP object of a ditransitive verb like ''give'' (e.g. ''give Mary <u>a present</u>'')
* OBL-θ, for instance OBL-LOC: the GF of a PP which is a locative complement of a verb like ''sit'' or ''put''
* OBL-θ, for instance OBL-LOC: the GF of a PP which is a locative complement of a verb like ''sit'' (e.g. ''sit <u>at the window</u>'')
* POSS: the GF of the possessor within an NP (e.g. ''<u>my</u> book'')
* POSS: the GF of the possessor within an NP (e.g. ''<u>my</u> book'')
* COMP: the GF of a finite complement clause complement of a verb like ''say'' (e.g. ''said <u>that Mary called</u>'')
* COMP: the GF of a finite complement clause complement of a verb like ''say'' (e.g. ''said <u>that Mary called</u>'')

Revision as of 08:36, 24 November 2020

Governable grammatical functions

In linguistics, a head governs a property of another expression if it requires this expression to have that property. Governable properties include grammatical functions, cases, and particular prepositions.

In Lexical-Functional Grammar, the governable grammatical functions are those which may be listed in the PRED values of meaningful words The textbook (p. 21) gives a complete list:

Governable grammatical functions: SUBJ, OBJ, OBJ-θ, OBL-θ, POSS, COMP, and XCOMP.

There are other GFs, for instance TOPIC and FOCUS, but heads cannot govern those.

The Greek letter θ in the functions OBJ-θ and OBL-θ stands for the name of a thematic role (the thematic roles are listed on p. 13 in the textbook). Thus, OBL-LOC is the GF of a locative PP (sit at the window), OBL-BEN the GF of a benefactive PP (bake a cake for Mary). The only thematic role that appears in OBJ-θ is THEME, the second object of verbs of giving and showing.

Here are some comments on the functions other than SUBJ and OBJ:

  • OBJ-THEME: the GF of the second NP object of a ditransitive verb like give (e.g. give Mary a present)
  • OBL-θ, for instance OBL-LOC: the GF of a PP which is a locative complement of a verb like sit (e.g. sit at the window)
  • POSS: the GF of the possessor within an NP (e.g. my book)
  • COMP: the GF of a finite complement clause complement of a verb like say (e.g. said that Mary called)
  • XCOMP: the GF of non-finite phrases with understood subjects (e.g. Lilly tried to leave)

Prepositional phrases