In
morphology and
syntax, words are often organized into
lexical categories or
word classes, such as "noun", "verb", "adjective", and so on. These word classes have
grammatical features (also called
categories or
inflectional categories), which can have one of a set of potential
values (also called the
property,
meaning, or
feature of the category). For example, consider the
pronoun in English. Pronouns are a
lexical category. Pronouns have the
person feature, which can have a
value of "first", "second", or "third". English pronouns also have the
number feature, which can have a value of either "singular" or "plural". As a result, we can describe the English pronoun "they" as a pronoun with [person:3] and [number:plural]. Third person singular pronouns in English also have a
gender feature: "she" is [gender:feminine], "he" [gender:masculine], and "it" or "they" [gender:neuter]. Different lexical categories realise or are specified for different grammatical features: for example, verbs in English are specified for
tense, aspect and mood features, as well as person and number. The features that a category realises can also differ from language to language. ==In semantics==