Grammar: Nominal Group

Grammar in EAP

Nominal groups

Introduction

Formal written English uses nouns and nominal groups (noun-based phrases) more than verbs.

One simple example is:

Like all other forms of life, we human beings are the product of evolution.

Like all other forms of life, we human beings are the product of how we have evolved.

The noun “evolution” is preferred to the verb “evolve” and the “wh” clause.

Another example is:

Premack used a set of plastic chips to teach a chimpanzee named Sarah the meaning of a set of symbols.

Premack used a set of plastic chips to teach a chimpanzee named Sarah what a set of symbols mean.

“The meaning of the symbols” is preferred to “what the symbols mean”

Try this exercise: Exercise

Structure of Nominal Groups 1

Written English is lexically dense – there is a higher proportion of content words per clause. This can be done by modification of nouns to form nominal groups.

A typical nominal group is structured in the following way:

determiner premodifier head postmodifier
a complicated solution to the problem

Nouns (which themselves can be nominalisations) can be premodified or postmodified (qualified):

premodifier + noun

adjective – the constitutional aspects

ed-participle – a balanced budget, from the confused events of 19-24 August, the emitted light

ing-participle – growing problem, one striking feature of the years 1929-31, existing structures

noun – market forces, cabinet appointments

See: Grammar: Premodification

noun + postmodifier

relative clause – students who have no previous experience

to-clauses – the abilty to succeed, the question to be debated

ing-clauses – a brake consisting of a drum divided into twelve compartments

ed-clauses – canoes preserved by a hard plaster, a brake consisting of a drum divided into twelve compartments, the curve shown

prepositional phrase (preposition + nominal group)- we need to bring to the box a special tool with a ready-compressed spring

adverb (or adverbial group) – the road back, the people outside

adjective (or adjectival group) – varieties common in India, the festival proper, something different

See: Grammar: Postmodification

that complement clause – the news that the research had succeeded was unexpected

to-infinitive complement clause –  the failure to provide him with adequate research facilities

of + ing complement clause – the possibility of increasing dollar receipts

wh- complement clauses – the question (of) whether there remained a distinctive philosophy of liberalism

Grammar: Complement Postmodification

Function of Nominal Groups

Nominal groups can function as subjects, complements or objects of prepositions.

Subject:

A more detailed life of Lord Reading, Liberal leader in the House of Lords and an important actor in the events of 1931,would be of great value.

Complement:

There are plans to extract a much greater harvest from the timber resource.

Object of preposition:

The information very properly reached the files of the survey for antimalarial compounds under the Survey Number SN-183.

Structure of Nominal Groups 2

A nominal group can also be qualified by another nominal group in apposition.

Dr. Maurice Aumont, the Director of the Berlitz School at Bordeaux, looked after him in an efficient and kindly way.

The first National Government, the government which forms the focal point of most historical writing on the crisis, followed the collapse of the Labour government in August 1931.

Sir Shridath Ramphal,former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth,addressed the close connection between environmental protection and economic-development issues of critical importance for developing countries.

A more complex description (Halliday, 1985, pp. 159-175) is:

Premodifier Head Postmodifier
Deictic Numerative Epithet Classifier Thing Qualifier
these three methods
these three rather different environments
these two old volume controls
these three forms of co-ownership
this discussion of the primacy of communal property
the two domestic products available
the many large oil companies in operation
the complete reorganisation of the company
the several active substances which were activated
the keyboard designs
the resistance shown by structures such as the rate of recruitment
the important contributions made to production by different groups in society
several dirty ones
several possible explanations for the effect
two large gaps to be filled
a careful discussion of this issue
an important test phase consisting of reinforced training
an effective promotion scheme

Or even:

Premodifier Head Postmodifier
Pre-Deictic Decictic Numerative Epithet Classifier Thing Qualifier
some of the   important research methods that are used in the laboratory
one of the many large oil companies in operation
some of the compounds being manufactured in New York

 

Epithets can include – in order:

attitudinal adjectives – beautiful, ugly, marvellous
size – tall, long
age – young, old
shape – square, circular
colour – black, blue, green

Classifiers can include – in order:

origin – Persian, German
substance – leather, steel
purpose – medical, gardening

Can you find an academic equivalent of “a lovely little old rectangular green French silver whittling knife” (Forsyth, 2013, p. 39).

Deictics can also be possessive nouns (e.g. his, my, IBM’s) or quantifiers (e.g. some, each, every, both, all).

Examples

The exception is David Marquand’s splendid biography of Ramsay MacDonald.

Meanwhile, in 1942 another committee was working on Britain’s postwar civil aviation policy.

More Examples

Many of the suggested benefits of group living have been concerned with avoiding being eaten by predators.

French is also spoken by a large number of the African immigrants in the UK.

This chapter is a brief distillation of a few of the themes in that book.

In the United States, most of the outstanding men who first made their name in the amateur game turned professional.

While the ozone hole has been considered a solved problem, we are now finding it has caused a great deal of the climate change that has been observed.

Subject-Predicator-Subject Complement (SPCs) Structure

Complex Nominal Groups are common in academic texts with the Subject-Predicator-Subject Complement (SPCs) structure, where two complex nominal groups are joined with a linking verb such as “is“.

For example:

Besides historiography and mathematical astronomy, another great innovation by the Greeks of the fifth century BCwas the art of tragedy.

 

But the information on the dynamics of population was often quite misleading.

Exercises

Exercise 1

Identifying head nouns in a nominal group: Grammar: Head Noun Exercise

Exercise 2

Try the following text. Notice how the word “need” is used. Notice how it is modified (premodified and postmodified) and how the nominal group it is the head of functions in the clause: Grammar: Nominal Groups Exercise 2

Exercise 3

Indentifying nominal groups: Word Classes Exercise 3

Exercise 4

Order of premodifiers: Exercise

Complex Nominal Groups are common in academic texts with the Subject-Predicator-Subject Complement (SPCs) structure, where two complex nominal groups are joined with a linking verb such as “is“.

For example:

Besides historiography and mathematical astronomy, another great innovation by the Greeks of the fifth century BCwas the art of tragedy.

Exercise 5

Exercise: SPCs Clause Structure

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References