In grammatical analysis, most phrases contain a
head, which identifies the type and linguistic features of the phrase. The
syntactic category of the head is used to name the category of the phrase; for example, a phrase whose head is a
noun is called a
noun phrase. The remaining words in a phrase are called the dependents of the head. In the following phrases the head-word, or head, is bolded: ::too
slowly —
Adverb phrase (AdvP); the head is an adverb ::very
happy —
Adjective phrase (AP); the head is an adjective ::the massive
dinosaur —
Noun phrase (NP); the head is a noun (but see
below for the
determiner phrase analysis) ::
at lunch —
Preposition phrase (PP); the head is a preposition ::
watch TV —
Verb phrase (VP); the head is a verb The above five examples are the most common of phrase types; but, by the logic of heads and dependents, others can be routinely produced. For instance, the
subordinator phrase: ::
before that happened — Subordinator phrase (SP); the head is a
subordinating conjunction—it subordinates the independent clause By linguistic analysis this is a group of words that qualifies as a phrase, and the head-word gives its syntactic name, "subordinator", to the grammatical category of the entire phrase. But this phrase, "
before that happened", is more commonly classified in other grammars, including traditional English grammars, as a
subordinate clause (or
dependent clause); and it is then labelled
not as a phrase, but as a
clause. Most theories of syntax view most phrases as having a head, but some non-headed phrases are acknowledged. A phrase lacking a head is known as
exocentric, and phrases with heads are
endocentric.
Functional categories Some modern theories of syntax introduce
functional categories in which the head of a phrase is a functional lexical item. Some functional heads in some languages are not pronounced, but are rather
covert. For example, in order to explain certain syntactic patterns which correlate with the
speech act a sentence performs, some researchers have posited
force phrases (ForceP), whose heads are not pronounced in many languages including English. Similarly, many frameworks assume that covert
determiners are present in bare noun phrases such as
proper names. Another type is the
inflectional phrase, where (for example) a
finite verb phrase is taken to be the complement of a functional, possibly covert head (denoted INFL) which is supposed to encode the requirements for the verb to
inflect – for
agreement with its subject (which is the
specifier of INFL), for
tense and
aspect, etc. If these factors are treated separately, then more specific categories may be considered:
tense phrase (TP), where the verb phrase is the complement of an abstract "tense" element;
aspect phrase;
agreement phrase and so on. Further examples of such proposed categories include
topic phrase and
focus phrase, which are argued to be headed by elements that encode the need for a constituent of the sentence to be marked as the
topic or
focus. ==Variation among theories of syntax==