There are a number of principles that guide the analysis of natural language utterances according to functional discourse grammar. Functional discourse grammar explains the phonology, morphosyntax, pragmatics and semantics in one linguistic theory. According to functional discourse grammar, linguistic utterances are built top-down in this order by deciding upon: • The
pragmatic aspects of the utterance • The
semantic aspects of the utterance • The
morphosyntactic aspects of the utterance • The
phonological aspects of the utterance According to functional discourse grammar, four components are involved in building up an utterance: • The conceptual component, which is where the communicative intention that drives the utterance construction arises • The grammatical component, where the utterance is formulated and encoded according to the communicative intention • The contextual component, which contains all elements that can be referred to in the history of the discourse or in the environment • The output component, which realizes the utterance as sound, writing, or signing The grammatical component consists of four levels: • The interpersonal level, which accounts for the
pragmatics • The representational level, which accounts for the
semantics • The morphosyntactic level, which accounts for the
syntax and
morphology • The phonological level, which accounts for the
phonology of the utterance == Example ==