本帖最后由 ceciliachiu 于 2012-5-10 14:15 编辑
Inflection (or Inflexion)
In English, aword in its bare form can be modified by an inflection to express different grammatical categories or to change the syntactic function. The more common ones you may come across are tense, grammatical voice, person, number and case.
For example:
Bare form
| Inflection
| Grammatical category
| praise
| praised
| Tense
| take
| (is) taken
| Voice
| interview
| interviewer, interviewee
| Person
| car
| cars
| Number
| they
| them (object pronoun), theirs (possessive pronoun)
| Case
| she
| her (object pronoun), hers (possessive pronoun)
| Case
| music
| musical
| Adjective (syntactic role)
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When answering a question, you need to make sure your answer is correctly inflected. Do not just put a word in its bare form on your answer sheet. Your meaning may be correct but your answer is still wrong.
For example:
Q: What sort of instruments does this shop sell?
A: musical (instruments)
Here, the word “music” is inflected to from an adjective. It is wrong to use just “music” as your answer.
Q: Which types of community group does the speaker give examples of?
A: music (group)
Here, the two nouns (i.e. “music” and “group”) go side by side to form a compound. In this case, inflection is not necessary.
Q: What two factors can make social contact in a foreign country difficult?
A: Customs and language
Here, the word “custom” should be inflected to indicate more than one custom (i.e. customs). You score no marks for just writing “custom”.
Chinese is a language that never uses inflections. It is therefore very common for Chinese students to overlook the importance of inflection when they communicate in English. Always pay attention to inflections when you express yourself in English.
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