Unit 1grammatical System of A Language
Unit 1grammatical System of A Language
Language consists of three parts. These parts are the phonological system, the
lexical system, the grammatical system. Only the unity of these three elements
forms a language.
The phonological system is the sound system of language. The lexical system is
the whole set of naming means, that is, words and stable word-groups.
Grammatical system is the set of regularities determining the combination of
naming means in the formation of utterances. The phonological description of
language is effected by the science of phonology; the lexical description of
language is effected by the science of lexicology; the grammatical description of
language effected by the science of grammar.
What is grammar? The word “grammar” derives from Greek and means “art of
letters” (gramma = letter). The term “grammar” is used in two meanings. On the
one hand, in its wide sense, the term refers to the explicit theory which is
constructed by the linguist to describe the speaker’s linguistic competence. On the
other hand, in its narrow sense, the term “grammar” refers to the study of
morphology (i.e. the rules of word formation, parts of speech and their
grammatical categories) and syntax (i.e. the rules of sentence formation).
Grammars are of different types. There is a descriptive grammar of language that
does not tell you how you should speak or what rules you should know in order to
speak. It only describes the rules that are already known, i.e. a descriptive
grammar describes your unconscious linguistic knowledge. Another type of
grammar is a prescriptive grammar which attempts to legislate what your
grammar should be; in other words, it tells you what rules you should know to
speak the standard language.
The universal grammar aims to uncover the principles characterizing all human
languages and to reveal the inborn human language faculty that makes language
acquisition possible (წარმოაჩინოს ადამიანის თანდაყოლილი უნარი და ნიჭი
ენისადმი, რაც შესაძლებლობას აძლევს მას აითვისოს ენა).
There are linguistic universals that refer to all languages. They are:
2. There are no “primitive” languages – all languages are equally complex and
equally capable of expressing any idea in the universe.
5. All human languages use a limited set of sounds that are combined to form
meaningful elements or words, which themselves may be combined to form
an infinite set of possible sentences.
6. All grammars contain similar rules for the formation of words and
sentences.
7. Every spoken language includes discrete sound segments that can be defined
by peculiar sound properties or features. For instance, every language has a
class of vowels and a class of consonants.
12.And finally, any normal child, born anywhere in the world, of any racial,
geographical, social or economic heritage, is capable of learning any
language to which he or she is exposed. The differences we find among
languages cannot be due to biological reasons.
These principles, that characterize all human languages, have been revealed and
studied by Universal Grammar.
The last type of grammar, we would like to focus on, is a theoretical grammar. The
aim of theoretical grammar is to present a theoretical description of a grammatical
system of a given language, that is, scientifically analyze and define main classes of
words, so called parts of speech, their grammatical categories and study the
mechanisms of sentence formation in the process of speech making.
The grammatical system of a language is a set of linguistic means and their
application rules, employed to produce a coherent utterance. ( A coherent
utterance is a linguistic structure which is lexically and grammatically marked
and which contains information.)
1. endings:
3. The synthetic forms of the Subjunctive Mood: were, be, have, etc.
Hundreds of pieces of silver and gold for use and display grace collections all over
the world.
Comprehension Exercises:
2. What is language?
2. Grammar is the set of structural rules that govern the composition of clauses, phrases and
words in any given natural language. T/F
3.Phonological system is the system of phones used in particular languages. T/F
5. Analytic languages tend to rely heavily on context for the interpretation of sentences.
T/F
c. Read and translate the examples of synthetic forms from Georgian language
and find their analytic equivalents in English to compare them:
1. წიგნის ყდა
2. მანქანის საბურავები
3. ის მოვიდა.
4. მე ვკითხულობ.
7. ის მღერის?
8. ის არ ატარებს მანქანას.
9. მე თეატრში დამპატიჟეს.