The difference between a phrase and a sentence (Chris)

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Jackson6612  #340328  Sat, 17 Mar 07 07:39 PM

whl626 said:

''As far as I know, 2 or a bunch of words with no subject and verb in it.

Eg. On second thought, I decided to join englishforums as a memberSmile <img src=" src="/emoticons/emotion-1.gif">. " On second though " is supposed to be a phrase, the later is the main sentence.''

 

Shouldn't latter be used in place of later above?

  
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Grammar Geek  #340330  Sat, 17 Mar 07 07:46 PM
yes
  
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Anonymous  #389840  Mon, 09 Jul 07 02:03 PM

Edited by Moderator in include source information: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/internet-grammar/clauses/hierarc2.htm

Please do not post information from other sites without acknowledging the source.

                                                               ****

Words, phrases, clauses, and sentences constitute what is called the GRAMMATICAL HIERARCHY. We can represent this schematically as follows:

sentences
consist of one or more...

clauses
consist of one or more
...

phrases
consist of one or more...

words

Sentences are at the top of the hierarchy, so they are the largest unit which we will be considering (though some grammars do look beyond the sentence). At the other end of the hierarchy, words are at the lowest level, though again, some grammars go below the word to consider morphology, the study of how words are constructed.

At the clause level and at the phrase level, two points should be noted:

1. Although clauses are higher than phrases in the hierarchy, clauses can occur within phrases:

The man who lives beside us is ill

Here we have a relative clause who lives beside us within the NP the man who lives beside us.

2. Clauses can occur within clauses, and phrases can occur within phrases.

Bearing these two points in mind, we can now illustrate the grammatical hierarchy using the following sentence:

My brother won the lottery

var number = navigator.appVersion if (number.indexOf("4") != "-1") { document.write ('
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') document.write ('
Click here to see the grammatical hierarchy in this sentence') document.write ('

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') } else { document.write ('
') document.write ('

This is a simple sentence (S), consisting of a matrix clause (MC):') document.write ('

[') document.write ('S/MC My brother won the lottery] ') document.write ('

') document.write ('

We can subdivide the clause into an NP and a VP: ') document.write ('

[') document.write ('S/MC [NP My brother] [VP won the lottery]') document.write (']

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The VP contains a further NP within it:

') document.write ('

[') document.write ('S/MC [NP My brother] [VP won [NP the lottery]]]') document.write ('

') document.write ('

So we have a total of three phrases. Each phrase consists of individual words: ') document.write ('

') document.write ('[') document.write ('S/MC [NP [Det My] [N brother]] ') document.write ('[VP [V won] [NP [Det the] [N lottery]]]]

') document.write ('

Each of the bracketed units here is a word, a phrase, or a clause. ') document.write ('We refer to these as CONSTITUENTS. ') document.write ('A constituent is defined as a word or a group of words which acts syntactically as a unit.') document.write ('

') }

This is a simple sentence (S), consisting of a matrix clause (MC):

[S/MC My brother won the lottery]

We can subdivide the clause into an NP and a VP:

[S/MC [NP My brother] [VP won the lottery]]

The VP contains a further NP within it:

[S/MC [NP My brother] [VP won [NP the lottery]]]

So we have a total of three phrases. Each phrase consists of individual words:

[S/MC [NP [Det My] [N brother]] [VP [V won] [NP [Det the] [N lottery]]]]

Each of the bracketed units here is a word, a phrase, or a clause. We refer to these as CONSTITUENTS. A constituent is defined as a word or a group of words which acts syntactically as a unit.

  
Anonymous  #485723  Thu, 06 Mar 08 04:52 PM

 

—A sentence must have a subject (expressed or not), a verb, and a complete thought supplied by a variety of constructions.

Example: We are assigned a grammar presentation.

—A phrase is a collection or word without a subject/verb, or complete thought

Example of a Phrase:

“over the river”, “through the woods”, “to grandmothers house.”

  
Jackson6612  #485896  Fri, 07 Mar 08 04:14 AM
Thank you, Anon.
  
Anonymous  #513149  Tue, 13 May 08 02:15 PM
i think this may be benificial

http://cc.ysu.edu/~tacopela/Phrases-and-Clauses.htm

 

  
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