Questions for self-control:
1.
What does the syntactic level study?
2.
Why the difference between a phrase and a sentence is fundamental?
3.
What is aphrase in compared languages?
4.
What criteria of defining phrase types exist in Grammar?
5.
Types of syntactic relations in phrases.
6.
Are there any distinctive features of English, Uzbek and Russian phrases?
7.
Tell about general ways of syntactic connectionof phrases in compared
languages?
8.
The problem of pre-position and post-position in phrases.
9.
The problem of interference in foreign language teaching acquisition
(Syntactic level).
Recommended literature:
1.
Yusupov U.K. Contrastive linguistics of the English and Uzbek languages.
Tashkent, 2013.
2.
Аракин В.Д. Сравнительная типология английского и русского языков.
Ленинград, 1979.
3.
Соловьѐва Н. Н. Весь русский язык в таблицах: От фонетики до
синтаксиса М., 2009.
LECTURE 13. TYPOLOGY OF A SENTENCE IN ENGLISH AND
NATIVE LANGUAGES
Problems for discussion:
1.
Definition of thesentence.
2.
Criteria of dividing sentences into types.
3.
Classification of sentences
4.
Typology of English, Russian and Uzbek sentence types.
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Key words:
The sentence, phonetics, approach, syntactic pattern, semantics.
It is rather difficult to define the sentence as it
is connected with many lingual and extra lingual
aspects
–
logical,
psychological
and
philosophical. There are many definitions of the
sentence and these definitions differ from each other
because that the scientists approach from different
viewpoints to this question. Some of them consider
the sentence from the point view of phonetics, others
- from the point of view of semantics (the meaning
of the sentence) and so on.
Some of the definitions of a sentence are
given below.
The Notional Definition of a Sentence: "It is
sometimes said that a sentence expresses a complete thought. This is
a notional definition: it defines a term by the notion or idea it conveys. The
difficulty with this definition lies in fixing what is meant by a ‗complete thought.‘
There are notices, for example, that seems to be complete in themselves but are not
generally regarded as sentences:
Exit, Danger, 50 mph speed limit.
"On the other
hand, there are sentences that clearly consist of more than one thought. Here is one
relatively simple example:
This week marks the 300th anniversary of the
publication of Sir Isaac Newton
’
s Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica,
a fundamental work for the whole of modern science and a key influence on the
philosophy of the European Enlightenment.
Jespersen‘s Definition of a Sentence: "Traditional attempts to define
the sentence were generally either psychological or logical-analytic in nature: the
former type spoke of ‗a complete thought‘ or some other inaccessible
psychological phenomenon; the latter type, following Aristotle, expected to find
every sentence made up of a logical subject and logical predicate, units that
themselves rely on the sentence for their definition.
A more fruitful approach is that of Otto Jespersen
(1924: 307), who suggests testing the completeness
and independence of a sentence, by assessing its
potential
for
standing
alone,
as
a
complete utterance."
According to B.A. Ilyish―The sentence is the
immediate integral unit of speech built up of words
according to a definite syntactic pattern and
distinguished
by
a
contextually
relevant
communicative purpose‖. The definition proves that
is quite right when he writes: ―Thenotion of
thesentence has not so far received a satisfactory
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definition‖.
―A sentence is a unit of speech whose grammatical structure conforms to the
laws of the language andwhich serves as the chief means of conveying a thought.
A sentence is not only a means of communicatingsomething about reality but also
a means of showing the speaker‘s attitude to it.
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