Nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs are all lexical parts of speech that allow us to add neologism (new word to be a new member). In addition Carnie (2006:43) called it as Open Class. This kind of word is easily learned and adopt by speaker of English. Meanwhile, functional parts of speech by contrast provide the grammatical information and Carnie called it as a “glue” that holds a sentence together and cannot adds a new word to be its member. The functional parts of speech are (Carnie, 2006: 44):
a. Determiner (D), the class of determiners is a little broader. It contains a number of subcategories including articles, quantifiers, numerals, deictics, and possessive pronouns. Determiners appear at the very beginning of English noun phrases.
· Determiners of English (D)
1). Articles: the, a, an
2). Deictic articles: this, that, these, those, yon
3). Quantifiers: every, some, many, most, few, all, each, any, less, fewer, no
4). (Cardinal) numerals: one, two, three, four, etc.
5). Possessive pronouns: my, your, his, her, its, our, their
6). Some Wh-question words: which, whose
b. Preposition (P), appear before nouns (or more precisely noun phrases). English prepositions include the following:
· Prepositions of English (P): to, from, under, over, with, by, at, above, before, after, through, near, on, off, for, in, into, of, during, across, without, since, until.
c. Complementizers (C), also connects structures together, but they embed one clause inside of another instead of keeping them on an equal level:
· Complementizers of English (C): that, for, if, whether
One of the most important categories that we will use is the category of Tense (T). Instead the category T consists of auxiliaries, modals and the non-finite clause marker. In the older syntactic literature, the category T is sometimes called Infl (inflection) or Aux (Auxiliary).
· Tense categories of English (T)
1). Auxiliaries: have, has, had, am, is, are, was, were, do
2). Modals: will, would, shall, should, can, could
3). Non-finite Tense marker: to
d. Conjunctions (Conj) are words that connect two or more phrases together on an equal level:
· Conjunctions of English (Conj): and, or, nor, neither … nor, either … or
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