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What is the difference between a phrase and a clause?
Can you give me an easy description of the differences in meaning between clause, phrase, and sentence?
Can you give me an easy description of the differences in meaning between clause, phrase, and sentence? |
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Phrase, clause and sentence are three of the structural units that create meaning. A phrase is a word or words that don’t have much meaning on their own. If I suddenly utter the phrase My brother, you’ll wonder why I said it, but if I say My brother drives, you’ll feel I’ve said something that has meaning. There’s a completeness about it, because it contains the verb drives. That makes it a clause, but it is also a sentence. But I needn’t stop there. I can go on to say something else, almost without drawing breath. I can say My brother drives, but he doesn’t drive very well. I’ve added another clause, and together they, too, make a sentence, joined by the little word but. It is perhaps helpful to see two or more clauses joined together as a clause complex, although sentence in general use describes both single and multiple clauses. |
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It depends on your theory of syntax. In most current non-generative theories of syntax, a sentence can be simple (i.e. it consists of one clause), complex (more than one clause, subordination), or compound (more than one clause, coordination). A phrase cannot be used as a stand-alone utterance, e.g. "reading a book" is a phrase. However, with proper intonation etc., it can become a sentence, ("What are you doing"?) "Reading a book." The word "go" can be a word (go), a phrase (go), a clause (Go!), and a sentence (Go!). For example, Alexander Reformatskij, a famous Soviet linguist, came up with the following Latin example: I! (=go.IMP.SG). This one letter/sound is a phoneme, a morpheme, a word, a phrase, a clause, and a sentence. I believe that in generative theories of syntax there is no distinction between a sentence and a clause. In fact, the clause/sentence is a phrase itself (TP or CP or FP). |
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I think it's easier to define this in functional terms and not in semantic terms.
Of course, provided that the expressions have sense. For example, the verb "to eat" needs a subject; thus, "to eat" isn't a clause, but "I eat" is. A more common clause perhaps is: "I eat pasta". The noun "pasta" works here as a direct object, but this object is optional: "I eat" is a correct clause because "pasta" isn't neccesary to get a grammatically correct one. "I eat fresh pasta with my girlfriend" has three complements: "I" (subject), "fresh pasta" (direct object) and "with my girlfriend" (an adverbial). Only the subject is obligatory. They are all "phrases", and phrases are categorized by their nucleus: "I" and "fresh pasta" are nominal phrases, and "with my girlfriend" is a prepositional phrase. "Eat" isn't a complement but it is a "functional group", a "verbal phrase", as well as the other complements, whose role is to be the nucleus of the clause. Any clause is also a sentence. The difference between clause and sentence makes sense when a complement is specified by means of other clause: "I know he likes me". "He likes me" is a clause working as a direct object of the main sentence. To conclude, "He likes me" is a clause and a sentence while "I know he likes me" is a sentence but not a clause. |
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