http://blog.sina.com.cn/wangyiqiu001[订阅]
字体大小: 正文
lexical category(2009-06-25 22:27:28)

In grammar, a lexical category (also word class, lexical class, or in traditional grammar part of speech) is a linguistic category of words (or more precisely lexical items), which is generally defined by the syntactic or morphological behaviour of the lexical item in question.

Common linguistic categories include noun and verb, among others.

 

There are open word classes, which constantly acquire new members, and closed word classes, which acquire new members infrequently if at all.

Different languages may have different lexical categories, or they might associate different properties to the same one. For example, Japanese has as many as three classes of adjectives where English has one;

Chinese, Korean and Japanese have measure words while European languages do not grammaticalize these units of measurement (a pair of pants, a grain of rice); many languages don't have a distinction between adjectives and adverbs, adjectives and verbs (see stative verbs) or adjectives and nouns[citation needed], etc. Many linguists argue that the formal distinctions between parts of speech must be made within the framework of a specific language or language family, and should not be carried over to other languages or language families.

加载中,请稍候...
  • 评论加载中,请稍候...

验证码:请点击后输入验证码  收听验证码

发评论

以上网友发言只代表其个人观点,不代表新浪网的观点或立场。

相关博文
读取中...
推荐博文
读取中...