THE SENTENCE AND THE CLAUSE
269
The sentence is normally considered to be the largest unit of grammar. Longer
stretches of text, such as paragraphs and segments of conversations, are usually
regarded as units of discourse. The sentence is principally a unit of written
grammar and is normally easily identified by an initial capital letter on the first
word and a full stop after the last word. For spoken language, the sentence as a
grammatical unit is more problematic (
Û
272a below
).
Sentences are composed of clauses. The clause is the core unit of grammar. A
sentence must include at least one main clause (
Û
270 below
). A clause consists
of two parts: a subject and a predicate. The subject is a noun phrase or its
equivalent (e.g. a nominal clause: writing novels is not easy) which indicates the
doer or agent of an action, state or event, and the predicate is a verb phrase and
any other accompanying elements (e.g. an object or complement):
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |