Preface by Hallday 王宗炎序 Preface by Chomsky 沈家煊序 導(dǎo)讀 Preface Acknowledgements 1 Preliminaries 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Grammar and meaning 1.3 Linguistic choice 1.4 Language in use 1.5 The study of texts 1.6 The notion of rank 1.7 Functions and metafunctions Summary Exercises 2 Labels 2.1 Music,mathematics,medicine and motor-vehicle maintenance 2.2 A political allegory 2.3 Word classes 2.4 Subjects 2.5 Groups 2.6 Three ways of looking at a clause Summary Further study Exercises 3 Subject and related functions 3.1 Subject revisited 3.2 Finites and Predicators 3.3 Complements 3.4 Adjuncts 3.5 Sample analysis 3.6 Sample analysis Summary Further study Exercises 4 Information structure and Thematic Structure 4.1 Organizing ideas 4.2 Information structure:Given and New information 4.3 Thematic structure:Theme and Rheme 4.4 The interaction of Information structure and Thematic structure Summary Further study Exercises 5 Grammar and text 5.1 Text and texture 5.2 The textual component of the grammar 5.3 Thematic progression 5.4 Cohesive ties Summary Further study Exercises 6 Process and Participant 6.1 Meanings:the clause as representation 6.2 Processes 6.3 Material Process 6.4 Mental Process 6.5 Relational Process 6.6 Verbal Process 6.7 Other Processes 6.8 Circumstance Summary Further study Exercises 7 Structure of the Nominal Group 7.1 Head and Modifier revisited 7.2 Logical and Experiential functions 7.3 Postmodifier/Qualifier versus Adjunct 7.4 Recursion 7.5 Paratactic Nominal Group complexes 7.6 Other kinds of group complex Summary Further study Exercises 8 Rankshifted clauses 8.1 Randshifted clause as Postmodifier/Qualifier 8.2 The defining relative clause 8.3 Omitted relative pronoun 8.4 Relative with preposition 8.5 Non-finite relative clauses 8.6 Recursion revisited:multiple embedding of clauses 8.7 Rankshifted clause as Subjector Complement 8.8 Non-finite clauses as Subject or Complement 8.9 Extraposition 8.10 Ohter rankshifted clauses Summary Further study Exercises 9 Clause complexes:expansion 9.1 Ways of combining clauses 9.2 ‘Equal’clauses 9.3 Dependent clauses 9.4 More complicated complexes Summary Further study Exercises 10 Clause complexes:projection 10.1 Projection clauses 10.2 Paratactic projection clauses 10.3 Hypotactic projection clauses 10.4 Non-finite projections 10.5 Dependent versus embedded projections 10.6 More complicated examples 10.7 Ambiguous structures Summary Further study Exercises 11 Applications of Functional Analysis 11.1 Explanations and theories 11.2 Writing in science and technology 11.3 Valued texts 11.4 English language teaching 11.5 Language and power Summary Further study Exercises 12 Historical perspectives 12.1 Origins 12.2 Before the twentieth century 12.3 De Saussure 12.4 Some American linguists 12.5 Whorf 12.6 Prague School 12.7 Firth and Malinowski 12.8 Two other contemporary approaches 12.9 Corpus linguistics 12.10 Hallidayan reference grammars Summary Further study Glossary References Index of Authors Subject Index 文庫索引
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