immediate constituent
Noun: A structural component of a grammatical construction (such as a phrase, clause, or sentence) that is identified at the first level of analysis in a hierarchical breakdown. In sentence analysis, these are the largest, most direct parts into which a construction can be initially divided.
This is a technical term used primarily in linguistics, specifically in syntactic analysis and grammar instruction. It describes the primary divisions of a linguistic unit. * The sentence "The cat slept" has two immediate constituents: the noun phrase "The cat" (subject) and the verb phrase "slept" (predicate). * In the phrase "very old books," the immediate constituents are the adverb "very" and the adjective phrase "old books."
- The concept is central to Immediate Constituent Analysis (IC Analysis), a method of sentence parsing that breaks down a sentence into its hierarchical layers of structure.
- An immediate constituent can itself be a construction that is further divisible into its own immediate constituents at the next level of analysis.
- Constituent (n): A general term for any word or group of words that functions as a single unit within a hierarchical structure.
- Ultimate Constituent (n): The smallest grammatical unit obtained at the final stage of analysis, typically a morpheme or a word that cannot be further divided grammatically.
- Primary constituent
- Direct component
This term is strictly analytical and describes a relationship within a structure. It does not refer to the meaning of the parts, but to their position in the grammatical hierarchy.
- a constituent of a sentence at the first step in an analysis: e.g., subject and predicate