What Is Modification in English Grammar?
Definition:
A syntactic construction in which one grammatical element (e.g., a noun) is accompanied (or modified) by another (e.g., an adjective). The accompanying element is called a modifier.
In morphology, modification is a process of change in a root or stem.
See Examples and Observations below. Also see:
- Modifier
- Attributive Noun
- Compound Adjective
- Dangling Modifier, Misplaced Modifier, and Squinting Modifier
- Degree Modifier
- Downtoner
- Epithet
- Intensifier
- Predeterminer
- Qualifier and Quantifier
- Resumptive Modifier
- Sentence Adverb
- Stacking
- Submodifier
- Summative Modifier
Examples and Observations:
- "Modifier contrasts with head. If a word or phrase in a construction is its head, it cannot simultaneously be a modifier in that construction. But, . . . an adjective, for example, may be a head of one phrase and simultaneously a modifier in a different phrase. In very hot soup, for example, hot is the head of the adjective phrase very hot (modified by very) and simultaneously the modifier of the noun soup."
(James R. Hurford, Grammar: A Student's Guide. Cambridge University Press, 1994) - Modifiers that appear before the head are called premodifiers. Modifiers that appear after the head are called postmodifiers.
- Optional Syntactic Functions
"[Modification] is an 'optional' syntactic function accomplished within phrases and clauses. If an element is not required in order to complete the thought expressed by a phrase or clause, it is probably a modifier. You might think of modification as a 'macro-function' in that it covers a very wide range of possible semantic notions, from various kinds of adverbial functions to nominal modification (size, shape, color, value, etc.). . . .
"Complementation is distinct from modification in that modification is always 'optional' from a syntactic perspective . . .. Modifying elements have a much 'looser' syntactic association with their heads than complements do."
(Thomas E. Payne, Understanding English Grammar: A Linguistic Introduction. Cambridge University Press, 2011)
- Length and Location of Modifiers
"Modifiers can be quite large and complex, and they need not occur immediately next to their heads. In the sentence The women who had volunteered for the beauty contest climbed giggling onto the stage, the head women is modified both by the relative clausewho had volunteered for the beauty contest and by the adjective giggling, the second of which is separated from its head by the verb climbed."
(R.L. Trask, Language and Linguistics: The Key Concepts, 2nd ed., ed. by Peter Stockwell. Routledge, 2007) - Word Combinations
"Word combination often leads to strings of adjectives and attributive nouns, a style that began in Time magazine in the 1920s, with the aim of providing impact and 'colour.' They may be relatively short (London-born disc jockey Ray Golding . . .) or long enough to become self-parodies, either pre-modifying a name (silver-haired, paunchy lothario, Francesco Tebaldi . . .) or post-modifying it (Zsa Zsa Gabor, seventyish, eight-time-married, Hungarian-born celebrity . . .)."
(Tom McArthur, Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press, 1992) - Modification and Possession
"[T]he two types of construction, attributivemodification and (inalienable) possession, share the property of being noun-headed but are otherwise different in type. This difference is generally reflected in the morphosyntax of the constructions. Attributive modification is normally expressed by a dedicated lexical class of adjectives whose members may show special morphosyntax, specifically agreement in features such as gender, number, or case."
(Irina Nikolaeva and Andrew Spencer, "Possession and Modification--A Perspective From Canonical Typology." Canonical Morphology and Syntax, ed. by Dunstan Brown, Marina Chumakina, and Greville G. Corbett. Oxford University Press, 2013) - Types of Modification
"I suggest that there are the following types [of modification] in nominal phrase premodification. . . .(a) Modifying the information given in the phrase. (i) Amplifying modification. The modifier amplifies the reader's interpretation of the phrase; that is, it adds information to it; for example, in 'thick slow hug of the bush,' thick amplifies slow by adding its causation; in 'a nice warm room,' WARMTH is added to ROOM. . . . (ii) Specifying modification. The modifier makes specific some information that is given vaguely elsewhere; for example, 'a good thick layer.' . . . (iii) Intensifying and weakening modification. The modifier affects the degree of information given elsewhere; that is, it instructs the hearer to interpret another word more strongly (for example, 'a nice warm room'), or more weakly (for example, 'mere decoration,' and the patronising use of 'a dear little thing.') . . .
Words are sometimes ambivalent, carring two types at once: nice is intensifying in 'a nice warm room,' but is also amplifying--'a nice warm room.'"
(b) Modifying the situation. The modifier does not relate to the informational content at all, but affects the discourse situation--the relation between speaker and hearer; for example, 'awesome goodie bags' (both modifiers modify the situation towards informality). . . .
(c) Modifying the act of ascribing information; for example, 'his former Labour-voting parents.'
(Jim Feist, Premodifiers in English: Their Structure and Significance. Cambridge University Press, 2012) - Other Types of Linguistic Modification
"The term [modification] is also used in morphology to refer to a process of change within the root or stem of a form, as in the vowel changes between the singular and plural of some nouns in English (man ~ men), or in cases of suppletion. In this, and related senses, the term is also found in historical linguistics.
"In phonetics, factors which influence the airflow in the vocal tract are often referred to as modificatons, e.g. the movement of the soft palate, the degree of closure of the glottis. The term is also sometimes used to refer to any factors which alter the typical actions of the vocal organs in producing the phonemes of a language, as in prosodic features, secondary articulations, and transitions between sounds."
(David Crystal, A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics, 4th ed. Blackwell, 1997)
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