Grammatical Particle
Function word, Grammar, Part of speech
978-613-7-28158-1
6137281582
100
2011-10-05
34.00 €
eng
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/230x230/9786137281581.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/230x230/9786137281581.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/cover/2000x/9786137281581.jpg
https://images.our-assets.com/fullcover/2000x/9786137281581.jpg
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In grammar, a particle is a function word that does not belong to any of the inflected grammatical word classes. It is a catch-all term for a heterogeneous set of words and terms that lack a precise lexical definition. It is mostly used for words that help to encode grammatical categories, or fillers or discourse markers that facilitate discourse such as well, ah, anyway, etc. Particles are uninflected. In English, the infinitive marker to and the negator not are examples of words that are usually regarded as particles. Depending on its context, the meaning of the term may overlap with such notions as "morpheme", "marker", or even "adverb" as in phrasal verbs such as out as in get out. Under the strictest definition, which demands that a particle be an uninflected word, English deictics like this and that would not be classed as such and are therefore inflected, and neither would Romance articles.
https://www.morebooks.de/books/fr/published_by/cede-publishing/189855/products
Linguistique générale et comparée
https://www.morebooks.de/store/fr/book/grammatical-particle/isbn/978-613-7-28158-1