📋 Contents of This Page
- Unit Introduction & Why It Matters
- Sentences and Their Parts
- Types of Sentences (by Structure)
- Words — Parts of Speech
- Phrases — Definition, Types & Structure
- The Verb Phrase (VP) — In Depth
- Clauses — Types and Functions
- Coordination and Subordination
- Phrase Structure & Tree Diagrams
- Exam Orientation & Important Questions
- Common Student Mistakes
- Quick Revision
- Practice MCQs (20 Questions)
What Is Syntax About?
Syntax is the study of how words combine to form sentences. It answers the question: What rules govern the arrangement of words, phrases, and clauses in a language?
You already know that "The dog bit the man" means something very different from "The man bit the dog" — even though the same words are used. The order and structure of words is what creates meaning. That's syntax at work.
Syntax moves from the smallest grammatical unit (the word) → upward through phrases → clauses → complete sentences. Understanding this hierarchy is the key to this entire unit.
Each level is built from the units of the level below it.
✅ What You Will Learn
- Parts of a sentence (Subject, Predicate, Object…)
- Four types of sentences by structure
- Parts of speech (word classes)
- Five types of phrases with examples
- The Verb Phrase (VP) in depth
- Main, Subordinate, Relative, Noun clauses
- Coordination vs Subordination
- Phrase structure tree diagrams
🎯 Exam Relevance
- Q4 in QP — all four sub-questions from this unit
- Q5(e): Example of a universal pronoun
- Q5(j): Examples of reflexive pronouns
- Q5(k): Systematic arrangement of words = ?
- Q5(n): Example of Kernel sentence
- Compound sentence, VP, Phrase types — directly asked
Sentences and Their Parts
| Sentence Element | Function | Typical Form | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subject (S) | What/who the sentence is about | Noun Phrase (NP) | The tall boy kicked the ball. |
| Predicate (P) | What the subject does or is | Verb Phrase (VP) | The boy kicked the ball hard. |
| Direct Object (DO) | Directly affected by the verb | Noun Phrase (NP) | She read the book. |
| Indirect Object (IO) | Beneficiary of the action | Noun Phrase (NP) | She gave him the book. |
| Subject Complement (SC) | Describes or renames the subject | NP or AdjP | She is a doctor / She seems tired. |
| Object Complement (OC) | Describes or renames the object | NP or AdjP | They elected her president. |
| Adverbial (A) | Gives time, place, manner, reason | PP, AdvP, clause | She read quickly / in the morning. |
Sentence Patterns (Five Basic Patterns)
| Pattern | Elements | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SV | Subject + Verb (intransitive) | Birds fly. / The baby cried. |
| SVO | Subject + Verb + Object | She reads books. |
| SVC | Subject + Verb (copula) + Complement | He is a teacher. / She seems tired. |
| SVOO | Subject + Verb + Indirect Obj + Direct Obj | She gave him a gift. |
| SVOC | Subject + Verb + Object + Complement | They elected him president. |
Types of Sentences by Structure
Sentences are classified by how many clauses they contain and how those clauses are related. This is directly tested in Q4 of the question paper.
Ramesh studies hard.
The children played in the park.
I wanted to go, but it was raining.
He failed; however, he tried again.
He left because he was bored.
When the bell rang, the students stood up.
When he arrived, she left, and nobody spoke.
| Type | Function | Example | Intonation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Declarative | States a fact or opinion | She is a teacher. | Falling ↘ |
| Interrogative | Asks a question | Is she a teacher? | Rising ↗ (yes/no) or Falling ↘ (wh-) |
| Imperative | Gives a command or request | Open the window. | Falling ↘ |
| Exclamatory | Expresses strong emotion | What a wonderful day! | Strong falling ↘ |
These are the seven coordinating conjunctions used to join independent clauses in compound sentences. Memory trick: FANBOYS.
Examples: "The dog bit the man." / "The girl reads the book." / "Ramesh plays cricket."
These are the basic underlying structures from which all other sentence types (passive, negative, question) are derived by transformational rules.
Words — Parts of Speech (Word Classes)
Words are the basic building blocks of syntax. Understanding word classes (traditionally called "parts of speech") is essential for analysing phrases and clauses.
| Word Class | Function | Sub-types / Key Points | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Noun | Names people, places, things, ideas | Common, Proper, Abstract, Concrete, Collective, Countable, Uncountable | Ramesh, city, happiness, water, flock |
| Pronoun | Replaces a noun to avoid repetition | Personal, Reflexive, Possessive, Demonstrative, Interrogative, Relative, Indefinite, Universal | he, herself, mine, this, who, everyone |
| Verb | Expresses action or state of being | Transitive, Intransitive, Auxiliary, Modal, Copula, Phrasal | run, is, can, seem, give up |
| Adjective | Modifies a noun or pronoun | Attributive (before noun), Predicative (after copula), Comparative, Superlative | beautiful, tall, taller, tallest |
| Adverb | Modifies verb, adjective, or another adverb | Manner, Time, Place, Degree, Frequency | quickly, now, here, very, always |
| Preposition | Shows relationship between noun and rest of sentence | Simple (in, on, at) and Complex (in front of, because of) | in, on, at, under, between, despite |
| Conjunction | Joins words, phrases, or clauses | Coordinating (FANBOYS), Subordinating, Correlative (either…or) | and, but, because, although, either…or |
| Interjection | Expresses sudden emotion | Exclamatory, not grammatically connected to sentence | Oh! Wow! Alas! Hurrah! |
"Everyone passed the exam." / "Each student must submit the form."
Universal pronouns are a subtype of indefinite pronouns — they refer to no specific individual but to all individuals collectively.
Examples: myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves
"She hurt herself." / "They enjoyed themselves." / "I did it myself."
Phrases — Definition, Types & Structure
Every phrase is named after its head — the most important word in it. The head is the word that cannot be removed without destroying the phrase. All other words in the phrase modify or depend on the head.
"is running very quickly" = Verb Phrase → HEAD = running (a verb)
"extremely happy about the result" = Adjective Phrase → HEAD = happy (an adjective)
A phrase can have up to three internal layers:
| Layer | Name | Function | Example in "the very old man" |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before head | Pre-modifier | Comes before the head, modifies it | "the very old" → pre-modifies "man" |
| Centre | Head | The obligatory core of the phrase | man |
| After head | Post-modifier | Comes after the head, usually a clause or PP | "man in the blue coat" → PP post-modifies |
The Verb Phrase (VP) — In Depth
The VP is the most structurally complex phrase. It can include auxiliaries (helping verbs), the main verb, objects, and adverbials:
| VP Structure | Example | Analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Main verb alone | She runs. | Intransitive — no object needed |
| Auxiliary + Main verb | She is running. | Progressive aspect — be + V-ing |
| Modal + Main verb | She can run. | Modal auxiliary expressing ability |
| Aux + Aux + Main verb | She has been running. | Perfect progressive — have + been + V-ing |
| Main verb + Direct Object | She reads the book. | Transitive verb + NP object |
| Main verb + Object + Adverbial | She placed the book on the shelf. | V + NP + PP |
| Copula verb + Complement | She seems tired. | Copula + AdjP complement |
Auxiliary Verbs in the VP
Primary Auxiliaries
- be → is/was/were/am/are/been/being (for progressive and passive)
- have → has/had/having (for perfect aspect)
- do → does/did (for questions, negation, emphasis)
Modal Auxiliaries
- can, could, will, would, shall, should, may, might, must, ought to, need, dare, used to
- Express: ability, permission, obligation, possibility, necessity, prediction
Simple: She reads. / She read.
Progressive: She is reading. / She was reading.
Perfect: She has read. / She had read.
Perfect Progressive: She has been reading. / She had been reading.
Clauses — Types and Functions
A. Independent (Main) Clause
Examples: "She read the book." / "The train arrived late." / "Ramesh is a doctor."
B. Subordinate (Dependent) Clause
A subordinate clause has a subject and verb but CANNOT stand alone — it depends on a main clause. It is introduced by a subordinating conjunction or relative pronoun.
| Sub-type | Introduced by | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adverbial Clause | because, although, when, if, since, unless, until, as soon as | Functions as an adverb — modifies the main verb | "She left because she was tired." |
| Relative (Adjective) Clause | who, whom, which, whose, that | Functions as an adjective — modifies a noun in the main clause | "The man who came yesterday is my uncle." |
| Noun Clause | that, what, whether, if, who, how, why | Functions as a noun — subject, object, or complement of main clause | "I know that she is coming." |
Clause Identification Practice
Coordination and Subordination
These are the two fundamental ways of combining clauses. This is directly tested in Q4d of the question paper.
| What Is Coordinated | Example |
|---|---|
| Two words | bread and butter; quick but careless |
| Two phrases | He ran to the door and opened it quickly. |
| Two independent clauses | "She studied hard, and she passed the exam." (Compound sentence) |
| Three or more clauses | "He came, he saw, and he conquered." |
| Subordinating Conjunction | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| because | Reason/cause | She left because she was tired. |
| although / even though | Concession/contrast | Although it was raining, they went out. |
| when / while / as | Time | When the bell rang, everyone stopped. |
| if / unless | Condition | If you study, you will pass. |
| so that / in order that | Purpose | She worked hard so that she could succeed. |
| after / before / until | Time sequence | He left before she arrived. |
| Aspect | Coordination | Subordination |
|---|---|---|
| Elements joined | Equal grammatical units | Dependent clause + independent clause |
| Can each part stand alone? | Yes — both parts are independent | No — subordinate clause cannot stand alone |
| Type of conjunction | Coordinating: and, but, or, so… | Subordinating: because, although, when, if… |
| Sentence type produced | Compound sentence | Complex sentence |
| Relationship | Equality | Hierarchy (one is "main", one is dependent) |
| Example | "She studied, and she passed." | "She passed because she studied." |
Phrase Structure & Tree Diagrams
Phrase structure rules (PS rules) describe how sentences and phrases are built. Tree diagrams visually represent this hierarchical structure.
These are the rules (from Chomsky's TGG) that describe how constituents are built from smaller units. They use the arrow → to mean "is made up of":
NP → (Det) + (Adj) + N + (PP) (Noun Phrase = optional determiner + optional adjective + noun + optional PP)
VP → V + (NP) + (PP) + (AdvP) (Verb Phrase = verb + optional object + optional PP + optional adverbial)
PP → Prep + NP (Prepositional Phrase = preposition + noun phrase)
University QP Analysis — Unit 4 Questions
→ Define: two or more independent clauses joined by coordinating conjunction or semicolon → FANBOYS list → 4–5 good examples → Distinguish from complex sentence → Note: each clause can stand alone
→ Define VP (predicate part of sentence; contains main verb + auxiliaries + objects/complements/adverbials) → Structure table (7 types) → Primary vs Modal auxiliaries → Examples with analysis → Tense and aspect in VP
→ Define phrase (group of words as unit, no finite verb, has head) → Head principle → Five types with definitions, structures, and examples → Pre-modifier + head + post-modifier framework
→ Define Coordination → Coordinating conjunctions → Examples (compound sentences) → Define Subordination → Subordinating conjunctions → Examples (complex sentences) → Comparison table → Key difference: equal vs dependent relationship
"Everyone is welcome." / "Each student must register."
"She hurt herself." / "I did it myself."
Any simple, active, affirmative, declarative sentence: "She reads the book." / "Birds fly."
2. Explain the five types of phrases with examples.
3. What are the basic sentence patterns of English? Give examples.
4. Analyse the phrase structure of a given sentence using a tree diagram.
5. What is a simple sentence? How does it differ from complex and compound sentences?
Mistakes Students Commonly Make
Confusing Phrase with Clause
A PHRASE has no finite verb — "the old man," "running quickly," "in the garden." A CLAUSE has both a subject AND a finite verb — "when the man ran," "because she was tired." Students often call subordinate clauses "phrases." Always check: Is there a finite verb? If yes → clause. If no → phrase.
Calling every multi-clause sentence a "compound sentence"
A compound sentence uses COORDINATING conjunctions (and, but, or…) joining INDEPENDENT clauses. If the sentence uses "because," "although," "when," etc., it is a COMPLEX sentence, not compound. "She came because she wanted to" = Complex. "She came and she sat" = Compound.
Defining VP as "only the verb"
The Verb Phrase is NOT just the main verb. In the broad syntactic sense, the VP = everything in the sentence after the Subject (the entire predicate). "She quickly read the novel in the library" — the VP is "quickly read the novel in the library," not just "read."
Mixing up Subordination and Coordination examples
"Although she was tired, she worked" → This is Subordination (complex sentence). Students sometimes write this as an example of coordination. The key test: Can BOTH parts stand alone? If not (because "although she was tired" cannot stand alone) → it's subordination.
Forgetting that "however" and "therefore" are NOT coordinating conjunctions
"However," "therefore," "moreover," "nevertheless" are conjunctive ADVERBS (also called transitional words). They can connect clauses but require a semicolon before them: "She worked hard; however, she failed." Using just a comma creates a comma splice error. True coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS) can use a comma before them.
Confusing universal pronoun with relative pronoun
Universal pronouns (everyone, everybody, each, every) refer to ALL members of a group with no specific individual. Relative pronouns (who, whom, which, that, whose) introduce relative clauses that modify nouns. "Everyone came" (universal) vs "The man who came" (relative). These are completely different categories.
One-Page Summary
Sentence Parts
- Subject — NP (who/what)
- Predicate — VP (action/state)
- Direct Object — NP (affected)
- Indirect Object — beneficiary
- Complement — describes S or O
- Adverbial — time/place/manner
Sentence Types (Structure)
- Simple — 1 independent clause
- Compound — 2+ independent clauses
- Complex — 1 main + 1 subordinate
- Compound-Complex — both
- FANBOYS = coordinating conj.
Five Phrase Types
- NP — head = Noun
- VP — head = Verb
- AdjP — head = Adjective
- AdvP — head = Adverb
- PP — Preposition + NP
- Every phrase has a HEAD
Verb Phrase (VP)
- Aux + Main Verb
- Primary: be, have, do
- Modal: can, will, must, may…
- Tense: past / present only
- Aspects: simple, progressive, perfect
Clause Types
- Main = stands alone
- Subordinate = depends on main
- Adverbial clause — because, when…
- Relative clause — who, which, that
- Noun clause — that, what, whether
Coordination vs Subordination
- Coord = equal + FANBOYS
- Subord = dependent + because/when
- Coord → Compound sentence
- Subord → Complex sentence
Q5 Answers
- Universal pronoun → everyone
- Reflexive pronouns → myself, herself
- Systematic word order → Syntax
- Kernel sentence → "The dog bit the man."
PS Rules
- S → NP + VP
- NP → Det + Adj + N + (PP)
- VP → V + (NP) + (PP) + (AdvP)
- PP → Prep + NP
- Tree diagrams show hierarchy
Phrase vs Clause test: "Does it have a finite verb AND a subject?" YES = Clause. NO = Phrase.
Sentence type test: Count independent clauses. 1 = Simple. 2+ joined by FANBOYS = Compound. 1 + subordinate = Complex.
Five phrase types: "Never Visit Any Abandoned Places" = NP, VP, AdjP, AdvP, PP.
Practice MCQs — Unit 4: Syntax
20 Questions · Choose the best answer · Submit for instant score