Linguistic tradition — from antiquity to modern scientific paradigms — assumes that every word in a language is classified as a particular part of speech — noun, verb, adjective, etc. — and thus has strictly defined “functional duties” and the part-of-speech meaning. However, languages exhibit transitional phenomena — words that have the morphological form of one part of speech but the meaning of another.

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Introduction

  • Olena Pchelintseva

摘要

Linguistic tradition — from antiquity to modern scientific paradigms — assumes that every word in a language is classified as a particular part of speech — noun, verb, adjective, etc. — and thus has strictly defined “functional duties” and the part-of-speech meaning. However, languages exhibit transitional phenomena — words that have the morphological form of one part of speech but the meaning of another.