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§ 48. In accordance with the principles described above it is possible to distinguish the following parts of speech in English:

1. Nouns

2. Adjectives

3. Pronouns 2

4 Numerals

5. Verbs

6. Adverbs

7. Adlinks (the category of state)

8. Modal words (modals)

9. Prepositions

10. Conjunctions

11. Particles

12. Interjections

13. Articles

14. Response words (yes, no)

_____________________________

2 Pronouns are correlated with different parts of speech (see § 140).

§49. Many linguists point out the difference between such parts of speech as, say, nouns or verbs, on the one hand and prepositions or conjunctions, on the other.

V. V. Vinogradov thinks that only the noun, the adjective, the pronoun, the numeral, the verb, the adverb and the cate­gory of state in the Russian language may be considered parts of speech, as these words "can fulfil the naming function or be indicative equivalents of names". Besides parts of speech V. V. Vinogradov distinguishes 4 particles of speech: 1) parti­cles proper, 2) linking particles, 3) prepositions. 4) conjunc­tions.

One may infer that particles of speech are denied the naming function, to which we object. There is certainly some difference between the nature of such words as table and after. One names an object, the other — a relation. But both "can fulfil the naming function". Nouns like relation, attitude, verbs like belong, refer name relations too, but in a way peculiar to these parts of speech. Prepositions and conjunctions name the relations of the world of reality in their own way.

E. Nida makes no distinction between nouns and preposi­tions as to their 'naming function' when he writes that "words such as boy, fish, run, walk, good, bad, against and with are signals for various objects, qualities, processes, states and relationships of natural and cultural phenomena".

H. Sweet distinguishes full words and empty words. Pro­ducing the sentence The earth is round, he writes: "We call such words as the and is form-words because they are words in form only".

Our opinion is that both the and is are words in content as well as in form. The impossibility of substituting an for the in the sentence above is due to the content, not the form of an. When replacing is by another link verb (seems, looks) we change the content of the sentence.

Many authors speak of function words. D. Brown, C. Brown, D. Bailey call "auxiliary verbs, prepositions and articles" function words. V. Zhigadlo, I. Ivanova, L. Iofic name prepositions, conjunctions, particles and articles as functional parts of speech distinct from notional parts of speech. C. Fries points out 4 classes of words called parts of speech and 15 groups of words called function words.

The demarcation line between function words and all other words is not very clear. Now it passes between parts of speech, now it is drawn inside a part of speech. Alongside of prepositions, auxiliary verbs are mentioned. Alongside of functional parts of speech, grammarians speak of the functional use of certain classes of words, for instance, verbs.

The criteria for singling out function words are rather vague. After enumerating some of such criteria C. Fries writes: "the basis for separating the words of these 15 groups from the others and for calling them 'function words' is the fact that in order to respond to certain structural signals one must know these words as items". And again: "There are no formal contrasts by which we can identify the words of these lists. They must be remembered as items".

§ 50. The difference between the function words and the others is not so much a matter of form as of content. The lexical meanings of function words are not so bright, distinct, tangible as those of other words. If most words of a language are notional, function words may be called semi-notional.

As suggested by Y. A. Krutikov, this distinction is, to some extent, reflected in the phenomenon of substitution. Notional words usually have substitutes — other words with much more general meanings which are used to replace them in certain environments. E. g. nouns, adjectives, numerals, adverbs can be replaced by pronouns (see § 140), verbs by the verbal substitute do (He speaks better than you do). The lexical meanings of semi-notional words are usually so weak and general that these words can hardly be replaced by sub­stitutes with still more general meanings.

As to form, a semi-notional word may coincide with a notional one. Take, for example, the form grows in the two sentences: He grows roses and He grows old. The first grows expresses an action, What does he do? He grows roses. In the second case the notion of action is very weak. He grows old can make but a facetious answer to What does he do? The linking function of grows comes to the fore. Grows links a word indicating a person (he) with a word denoting a property of that person (old). In this function it resembles (and is often interchangeable with) a few other verbs with faded lexical meanings and clear linking properties (become, turn, get). The fading of the lexical meaning in grows is connected with changes in its combinability. As a linking word it ac­quires obligatory bilateral connections, whereas grows as a no­tional word has variable combinability. The semi-notional grows forms connections with adjectives, adlinks, with which the notional grows is not combinable. The fading of the lexical meaning affects the isolatability of words (see § 6). Semi-notional words rarely or never become sentences.

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