Bibliographic Information

Working with functional grammar

J.R. Martin, Christian M.I.M. Matthiessen, Clare Painter

Arnold, 1997

  • : pbk

Available at  / 72 libraries

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Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This workbook is designed to teach and practice a wide range of grammatical analyses provided by M.A.K. Halliday in his "Introduction to Functional Grammar". Halliday's work opened up the possibility of using grammar to explore how a text means what it does; this workbook seeks to help students understand Halliday's ideas and to apply them in the analysis of English texts. The book contains summaries of Halliday's main points, clarifications of problems in analysis and graded exercises and texts to build students' skills in grammatical analysis. A troubleshooting section is included in each chapter which addresses the practical difficulties that may arise when applying grammatical analysis to a variety of texts. Useful for anyone who has an interest in the linguistic analysis of text and who wishes to use the insights of Halliday's grammar, this book can be used alone to support a course in functional grammar or in conjunction with "Introduction to Functional Grammar". While assuming no prior knowledge of functional grammar, it caters not only for the novice but for readers with varying degrees of linguistic expertise and familiarity with Halliday's work.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 Introduction: What is functional grammar?
  • why this functional grammar?
  • using the workbook
  • getting started with text analysis
  • constituency - functional and class units
  • reasoning in a functional grammar
  • paradigms as system networks
  • choice and constituency
  • learning to use IFG
  • theme
  • mood
  • transivity
  • the clause complex
  • key to chapter 2 - theme
  • key to chapter 3 - mood
  • key to chapter 4 - transivity
  • key to chapter 5 - the clause complex.

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