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Grammar
15
Morpheme: The smallest grammatical unit.
Free morpheme: A morpheme that can stand on its own as a word.
Affix: A morpheme that cannot stand on its own as a word, but combines with others to create a new word.
Phrase: A group of words centred around a head word.
Head word: The central word in a phrase which gives the phrase its name (e.g. noun phrase) and may be modified by other words.
Modification: The adding of additional words to provide more detail to a head word in a phrase either before it or after it.
Clause: A group of words centred around a verb, which may be either grammatically complete or incomplete.
Active voice: A clause where the agent (doer) of an action is the subject.
Passive voice: A clause where the patient is in the subject position, and the agent either follows or is left out.
Tense: How the time of an event is marked (usually through verb inflection): past, present and future.
Aspect: Another element of marking the time of an event, by specifying whether they are progressive or perfective.
Coordination: The joining of two of more independent clauses via coordinating conjunctions.
Subordination: The joining of two of more clauses where only one is independent and the others dependent.
Sentence: A larger unit of meaning, which may be formed of a single clause or several clauses.
Sentence function: The purpose a sentence fulfils in communication: as a statement, question, command or exclamation.
Grammar
Across:| 2. | The joining of two of more clauses where only one is independent and the others dependent. | | 5. | A clause where the agent (doer) of an action is the subject. | | 8. | A morpheme that cannot stand on its own as a word, but combines with others to create a new word. | | 10. | The joining of two of more independent clauses via coordinating conjunctions. | | 12. | The purpose a sentence fulfils in communication: as a statement, question, command or exclamation. | | 14. | The central word in a phrase which gives the phrase its name (e.g. noun phrase) and may be modified by other words. | | 15. | A larger unit of meaning, which may be formed of a single clause or several clauses. |
| | Down:| 1. | The smallest grammatical unit. | | 3. | A clause where the patient is in the subject position, and the agent either follows or is left out. | | 4. | The adding of additional words to provide more detail to a head word in a phrase either before it or after it. | | 6. | How the time of an event is marked (usually through verb inflection): past, present and future. | | 7. | Another element of marking the time of an event, by specifying whether they are progressive or perfective. | | 9. | A group of words centred around a head word. | | 11. | A morpheme that can stand on its own as a word. | | 13. | A group of words centred around a verb, which may be either grammatically complete or incomplete. |
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© 2016
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Grammar
Across:| 2. | The joining of two of more clauses where only one is independent and the others dependent. | | 5. | A clause where the agent (doer) of an action is the subject. | | 8. | A morpheme that cannot stand on its own as a word, but combines with others to create a new word. | | 10. | The joining of two of more independent clauses via coordinating conjunctions. | | 12. | The purpose a sentence fulfils in communication: as a statement, question, command or exclamation. | | 14. | The central word in a phrase which gives the phrase its name (e.g. noun phrase) and may be modified by other words. | | 15. | A larger unit of meaning, which may be formed of a single clause or several clauses. |
| | Down:| 1. | The smallest grammatical unit. | | 3. | A clause where the patient is in the subject position, and the agent either follows or is left out. | | 4. | The adding of additional words to provide more detail to a head word in a phrase either before it or after it. | | 6. | How the time of an event is marked (usually through verb inflection): past, present and future. | | 7. | Another element of marking the time of an event, by specifying whether they are progressive or perfective. | | 9. | A group of words centred around a head word. | | 11. | A morpheme that can stand on its own as a word. | | 13. | A group of words centred around a verb, which may be either grammatically complete or incomplete. |
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© 2016
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only