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Textual Units. Supra-Phrasal Unity and Paragraph

Analyzing the structure of the text, linguists identify semantically connected

sentence sequences as certain syntactic formations. One of prospective trends in

modern text linguistics is describing such syntactic formations, or text units,

identifying patterns according to which they are built and studying relations

between them. Irrespective of their specific features, all text units are united by

their common function – they represent the text as a whole integrally expressing

the textual topic.

There is no universal agreement as to the term that should be used to

describe text units. In the Russian tradition the following terms were used to refer

to such formations: “phrase”, “strophe”, “prosaic strophe”, “component”,

“paragraph”, “microtext”, “period”, “syntactic complex”, “monologue utterance”,

“communicative bloc”, “complex syntactic unity”, “supra-phrasal unity”. The latter

is the most commonly used one.

It should be noted that there are some scholars who do not recognize the

existence of linguistic units beyond the framework of the sentence. This opinion

can be explained by the lack of a complete systematic description of linguistic

peculiarities of such units.

The problem of text units has been addressed by numerous scholars both in

this country and abroad. Speaking about Russian linguists, we should mention the

works by I. R. Galperin, O. I. Moskalskaya, E. A. Referovskaya, Z. Ya. Turaeva,

G. Ya. Solganik and others. A new approach to the nature of the text was proposed

by Prof. Blokh, who introduced the notion of dicteme – the elementary topical

textual unit.

The supra-phrasal unityis a minimal text unit consisting of two or more

sentences united by a common topic. In some cases the SPU can coincide with the

text if it’s a short one, for example, a news item in the newspaper, a miniature

story, etc. However, most commonly, the SPU is a component of a larger text. The

SPU consists of at least two sentences, it is characterized by topical,

communicative and structural completeness and the author’s attitude towards what

is being communicated. The SPU is a complex semantico-structural unit, the

communicative value of which does not equal the sum of meanings of its

constituent sentences, it is a new semantico-structural formation.

It should be noted that sometimes it is not easy to delimit the boundaries of

the SPU. In some cases it can coincide with the paragraph (this is especially typical

of scientific papers and business documents), while in others the paragraph can be

easily divided into several SPUs, for example, in fiction and poetry.

As for the correlation of the supra-phrasal unity and the paragraph, a few

decades ago the SPU was considered to be a unit equivalent to the paragraph. In

today’s text linguistics there are two approaches to this problem. Some scholars

still believe that the SPU coincides with the paragraph, or rejecting the term



“supra-phrasal unity”, consider the paragraph to be a complex syntactic unity.

Other researchers draw a strict demarcation line between the SPU and the

paragraph saying that the former is a unit of composition while the latter is a unit

of punctuation.

In the first place, the supra-phrasal unity is essentially a feature of all the

varieties of speech, both oral and written, both literary and colloquial. As different

from this, the paragraph is a stretch of written or typed literary text delimited by a

new (indented) line at the beginning and an incomplete line at the close.

In the second place, the paragraph is a polyfunctional unit of written speech

and as such is used not only for the written representation of a supra-phrasal unity,

but also for the introduction of utterances of a dialogue, as well as for the

introduction of separate points in various enumerations.

In the third place, the paragraph in a monologue speech can contain more

than one supra-phrasal unity and the supra-phrasal unity can include more than one

paragraph.


Date: 2015-12-17; view: 2645


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