The Grammatical Framework and Textual Analysis – what do you really need to know at A2?
You must know:
Pronouns: first/second/third person singular and plural
Nouns: abstract and concrete, proper and common
Sentence functions: declarative, imperative, interrogative, exclamatory
Adjectives and adverbs (people often confuse adjectives with abstract nouns)
Modifiers and intensifiers
Verbs
Simple sentences
Orthography: historical spelling features (extra ‘e’; doubled letters; variants like ie/y, u/v)
You should know all or some of the following:
Comparatives/superlatives of adjectives
Types of adverbs & adverbials (manner/degree/time/place)
Verbs – aspect/tense; main/modal/auxiliary/primary
Pre- and post- modification of nouns
Conjunctions – co-ordinating and subordinating
Compound and complex sentences
Minor sentences
Syntactic parallelism
You might even know:
Passive/active voice verbs
Finite/non-finite verb forms
Clause types: relative, comment, main, subordinate/dependent
Clause types: adjectival, adverbial
Textual Analysis work always requires you to analyse the effect of grammatical and lexical features of the text. Therefore, grammar is only one aspect, but a solid knowledge of grammar is often a differentiating feature of a very strong candidate.
You should be able to connect these grammatical features with contextual factors, i.e. audience, purpose, genre/form etc. NB: be careful with the intended audiences of historical texts in Unit 5. Diary entries are usually intended only for the writer’s eyes, or maybe their family. A farmer’s wife writing a diary in 1796 is not doing so for ‘people interested in farming in the 18th century’! Likewise, letters have a specific intended audience of an individual or household, unless written to a newspaper/magazine.
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