LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 Ключові слова: відприслівникова дієслівна аналітична синтаксична транспозиція, означальні прислівники, обставинні прислівники, предикативні прислівники, відприслівниковий дієслівний аналітичний синтаксичний транспозит, відприслівниковий дієслівний аналітичний напівморфологізований синтаксичний транспозит. Available 19 September 2013. Yana Vzhesch УДК 82-92=111:004.738.5 SYNTACTICAL ORGANISATION OF THE NEWS TEXTS HEADLINES IN ELECTRONIC VERSIONS OF BRITISH AND AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPERS Syntactical organisation of the news text headlines in electronic versions of British and Australian newspapers is considered, main syntactical formulas of constructing news text headlines are analyzed, peculiar features of the syntactical formulas of constructing news text headlines are disclosed. Keywords: mass media, informational genres, electronic versions, news text headlines, syntactical organization, declarative sentences, interrogative sentences, imperative sentences, single-nucleus sentences, double-nucleus sentences. The modern world is experiencing the period of “informational explosion” that is inalienably connected with the development of the Mass Media and its close interaction with the Internet technologies. Due to the hectic pace of life the mass media are demanded to be more informative, more operative and more visual. This contributes to the expanding role of the texts of the informational genres, primarily, news texts. In the twentieth century the epoch mouthpiece was a newspaper, now this role is transferred to the Internet. In the trouble time, to get information a modern person, first of all, appeals to the Internet, electronic versions of the newspapers and pays attention to the headlines. In their turn modern mass media headlines must motivate, attract the reader‟s attention, interest and evoke the desire to continue reading. The study of the mass media was initiated in the late 40-s. One of the first analyses, based on the description of mass media functions, was made by H. Lasswell. In recent decades researchers have appealed to the news texts with the purpose of analyzing the language functioning [Васильева 1982; Володина 2003; Добросклонская 2005; Костомаров 2004; Солганик 1981]. Now researchers are studying media discourse, genres of the Internet texts, their structural and functional peculiar features [Апалат 2003; Заборовская 2003; Потапенко 2009]. So, the Internet discourse has been studied from different aspects of its manifestation, nevertheless the structure, organization, choice of forms of its smaller constituents still has insufficient attention. The purpose of the present paper is to study and compare the syntactical organizational peculiarities of the headlines in the electronic versions of British and Australian newspapers. This purpose can be achieved by solving the following tasks: to analyze the syntactical organization of the headlines, to describe characteristic features of their syntax, to determine the main tendencies in their formation. As a practical material for the present research the text headlines from the electronic versions of such British newspapers as The Times and The Guardian and such Australian newspapers as The Australian and Herald Sun have been used. These publications are broadsheet quality papers aimed at an educated and informed reader. The selection is determined by the circulation. According to the data, provided by the Audit Bureau of Circulations, in 2013 the circulation of The Times, founded in 1785, was 399,339 and the circulation of The Guardian, founded in 1821, was 189,000. According to the data, provided by The Newspaper Works, in 2010 the circulation of Herald Sun, established in 1840, was 515,500 and the circulation of The Australian, established in 1964, was 135,115. In the research the selection of headlines is not restricted with the relevance to the topic; however, most of the headlines are from top stories. © Vzhesch Y., 2014

48

SECTION ІII. Theoretical Issues of Syntax In the research of the news text headlines in electronic versions of the newspaper we proceed from the fact that first of all we deal with text from the newspaper. So, it is expedient to be oriented towards the researches made on the basis of “papers”. In the beginning the notions, the research is based on, are considered. Syntax is a part of linguistics the object of which is the sentence as the main unit of speech and the word group as the main constituent of the sentence. Grammatical syntax is the grammatical aspect of the sentence construction. Stylistic syntax is the study about the semantic use of syntactical models, application of the same syntactical model to express different content [Ахманова 1966]. Syntax deals with the way words are combined. Syntax studies the way in which the units and their meanings are combined. It also deals with the peculiarities of syntactic units, their behaviour in different contexts [Волкова 2010]. The headline (the title given to a news item or an article) is a dependent form of newspaper writing. The main function of the headline is to inform the reader briefly what the text that follows is about [Гальперин 2009]. A skillfully turned out headline tells a story, or enough of it, to arouse or satisfy the reader‟s curiosity. Headlines are almost a summary of the information contained in the news item or article [Гальперин 2009]. Syntactically headlines are very short sentences or phrases of a variety of patterns: full declarative sentences, interrogative sentences, nominative sentences, elliptical sentences (with an auxiliary verb omitted, with the subject omitted, with the subject and part of the predicate omitted), sentences omitted, phrases with verbals, questions in the form of statements, complex sentences, headlines including direct speech (introduced by a full sentence, introduced elliptically) [Гальперин 2009]. In the present research as a basis for the analysis of the syntactical organisation of the news text headlines in electronic versions of the newspapers theoretical fundamentals introduced by N. Kobrina are used [Кобрина 1965]. In the book N. Kobrina sticks to the traditional syntactic analysis of the sentence, based on defining the principal and secondary parts of speech, and the words are analyzed depending on the syntactic functions they perform. In the British newspaper The Times most of the headlines are simple declarative sentences, e.g.: Assad gets US-Russian ultimatum, Dozens die in Kenya grenade attack, Police unveil Muslim woman with mugshot. We rarely find interrogative sentences, e.g.: Would drank-tanks work? In some cases we come across composite sentences, e.g.: British gas raises prices 8% as heating goes on, Six killed as bus piles into Ottawa train. In the headlines we meet both double-nucleus and single-nucleus sentences, e.g.: Clegg eggs on party to attack Torries and Father‟s fears for missing daughter. But we must admit that double-nucleus sentences dominate. Among single-nucleus sentences we find mostly nominal sentences, e.g.: Benefit cuts leading to instability. In doublenucleus sentences the subjects are usually personal subjects proper with premodification (Statefunded free schools‟ teachers told to wear hijab) and in some headlines with postmodification (Alarm over shortage of nurses on NHS wards). As for the predicate, it is either simple (Online diet pill kills young rugby star) or compound (Scotland could field its own Olympic team in Rio 2016). The peculiar feature of double-nucleus sentences is that in some cases the predicate is expressed elliptically, e.g.: NHS doctors paid 150.00 for overtime (the complete predicate would be are paid, were paid or will be paid), Six killed as bus piles into Ottawa train (the complete predicate would be were killed). In the British newspaper The Guardian the headlines are simple declarative sentences, e.g.: Labour pledges minimum-wage rise, Baghdad car bomb kills at least 50. In the headlines we find both double-nucleus and single-nucleus sentences, e.g.: Turkey artists seek protest spirit, Salmond at pro-independence rally. Double-nucleus sentences also dominate. Single-nucleus sentences are represented by nominal sentences, e.g.: Bedroom tax despair in Tory village. In double-nucleus sentences the subjects are mostly of the type of personal subjects proper, e.g.: Brain could exist outside body. The predicate is either simple (Kenyan gunmen kill 22 in shopping centre attack) or compound (Obama could meet Rouhani at UN). In this newspaper w e also come across the elliptically expressed predicate, e.g.: Detainees at immigration centre „facing sexual abuse‟ (according to the grammar rules it should be are facing), School investigated for mark fixing (after 49

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 reading the article we understand that the school itself didn‟t investigate but it has been investigated). In both newspapers in the headlines they use direct speech with omission of the predicate to convey the words of the author, e.g.: May: „Women should be free to decide what to wear‟ (The Times) and Gillard: losing power is „hits like a fist‟ (The Guardian). The conclusion is that the most frequently used syntactical formula for the news text headlines in electronic versions of British newspapers is a simple declarative double-nucleus sentence with the personal subject proper and a simple or, less frequently, compound predicate. Sometimes predicates are used elliptically. The second preferable syntactical organization is declarative single-nucleus sentence, represented by a nominal sentence. In rare cases the headlines are constructed in the form of interrogative sentences, composite sentences or reflect direct speech. In the Australian newspaper Herald Sun we mostly find simple declarative sentences, e.g.: Scientists claim proof of alien life. Rarely do we see imperative sentences, e.g.: Trek her just doing her job. Not frequently we come across complex sentences with conjunctions (News missed while you were sleeping) and with the omitted conjunction (Conca signs, Martin future unclear (conjunction that is implied). In the headlines with the same regularity we meet both doublenucleus (Coalition steps back from rebel MP) and single-nucleus sentences (Two dead in house fire). In double-nucleus sentences the subject is mostly personal subject proper, but in individual cases it is the indefinite personal subject (You pay for big, fat Greek junket) or the demonstrative subject (Now it‟s Toyota and Ford vs. Holden). The predicate in this sentences is either simple (Serial killer now admits 85 murders) or compound (Stress could warn of obesity risk). The peculiar feature is the incomplete predicate, e.g.: Warne hopeful of reconciliation (according to the grammar rules we must write is hopeful). Another peculiarity is the adverbial modifier taking initial position, e.g.: Now it‟s Toyota and Ford vs. Holden, Still no answers on wall collapse. Sometimes in the headlines they use direct speech with omission of the predicate to convey the words of the author, e.g.: Mitchell: Curse is a stain. In the Australian newspaper The Australian the headlines are organized only in the form of simple declarative sentences, e.g.: Party officials face lobbying ban, WA loses AAA rating. Doublenucleus sentences predominate, where the type of the subject is exceptionally a personal subject proper (Colorado flooding triggers oil spills, Charles reaches heir milestone) and the type of the predicate is simple (Nantepreneurs take the lead in business), in rare cases it is compound (USPS may need emergency rate hike). We observe that very often predicates are expressed elliptically, e.g.: Productivity the key to growth (we must say Productivity is the key), ASX directors to quit after US fine (we must say ASX directors are to quit). We seldom find single-nucleus sentences, which are represented by nominal sentences, e.g.: Calls for „urgent‟ car industry report. There are some headlines that include direct speech, the peculiar feature of which is that the source or the author of the words takes the final position, e.g.: No housing bubble, says RBA official, Bomber was likely Brisbane man: police. The conclusion is that the most frequently used syntactical formula for the news text headlines in electronic versions of Australian newspapers is a simple declarative double-nucleus sentence with the personal subject proper and a simple or, less frequently, compound predicate. Sometimes predicates are used elliptically. And in some cases the initial position is taken by the adverbial modifier. The second preferable syntactical organization is a declarative single-nucleus sentence, represented by a nominal sentence. In rare cases the headlines are constructed in the form of composite sentences or reflect direct speech with the author of the words in the final position. In the final analysis it can be concluded that British and Australian newspapers use the same patterns in organizing news text headlines, namely, simple declarative double-nucleus sentences with the personal subject proper and the simple or, less frequently, compound predicate or declarative single-nucleus sentences, represented by a nominal sentence. Both variants of Englishspeaking news resort to the transforms of the incomplete predicate and the direct speech. Nevertheless they are different in the peculiarities. In British headlines we find interrogative 50

SECTION ІII. Theoretical Issues of Syntax sentences and in Australian headlines we find adverbial modifiers in the initial position and the words of the author in the final position. The language of different Internet mass media is different, as well as the syntactical formulas of their organization; however, there are many common features as well as specific peculiarities. References Апалат 2003: Апалат, Г.П. Структура, семантика і прагматика текстів-інтерв‟ю (на матеріалі сучасної англомовної преси) [Текст] : автореф. дис… канд. філол. наук : 10.02.04 / Київський національний лінгвістичний ун-т. – Київ, 2003. – 19 с. Ахманова 1966: Ахманова, О.С. Словарь лингвистических терминов [Текст] / О. С. Ахманова. – М. : Издательство «Советская Энциклопедия», 1966. – 608 с. Васильева 1982: Васильева, А.Н. Газетно-публицистческий стиль речи [Текст] / А. Н. Васильева // Курс лекций по стилистике русского языка для филологов. – М. : «Русский язык», 1982. – 112 с. Волкова 2010: Волкова, Л.М. Теоретична граматика англійської мови : Сучасний підхід [Текст] / Л. М. Волкова // Навч. посібник. – К. : «Освіта України», 2010. – 256 с. Володина 2007: Володина, М.Н. Когнитивный аспект исследования языка массовой коммуникации [Текст] / М. Н. Володина // Язык массовой межличностной коммуникации. – М. : Медиа-Мир, 2007. – С. 54-65. Гальперин 2009: Гальперин, И.Р. Текст как объект лингвистического исследования [Текст] / И. Р. Гальперин. – М. : Книжный дом «ЛИБРОКОМ», 2009. – 144 с. Добросклонская 2005: Добросклонская, Т.Г. Вопросы изучения медиатекстов (опыт исследования современной английской медиаречи) [Текст] / Т. Г. Добросклонская. – М. : Едиториал УРСС, 2005. – 288 с. Заборовская 2003: Заборовская, С.В. Газета как гипертекст [Текст] / С. В. Заборовская // Вісник Харківського університету. – Серія Філологія. – 2003. – Вип. 37. – С. 3-6. Кобрина, Корнеева 1965: Кобрина, Н.А., Корнеева, Е.А. Очерки по синтаксису современного английского языка [Текст] / Н. А. Кобрина. – М. : Высшая школа, 212 с. Костомаров 2004: Костомаров, В.Г. Стилистика. Компендиум лекций [Текст] / В. Г. Костомаров. – М. : Издательский дом «Академия», 2004. – 256 с. Потапенко 2009: Потапенко, С.І. Сучасний англомовний медіа-дискурс : лінгвокогнітивний і мотиваційний аспекти [Текст] : монографія. – Ніжин : Видавництво НДУ імені М. Гоголя, 2009. – С. 85-95. Солганик 1981: Солганик, Г.Я. Лексика газеты (функциональный аспект) [Текст] / Г. Я. Солганик. – М. : Высшая школа, 1981. – 112 с. Sources and Abbreviations Herald Sun. – Access mode : URL : http://www.heraldsun.com.au/. – Title from the screen. The Australian. – Access mode : URL : http://www.theaustralian.com.au/. – Title from the screen. The Guardian. – Access mode : URL : http://www.theguardian.co/uk/. – Title from the screen. The Times. – Access mode : URL : http://www.thetimes.co.uk/. – Title from the screen. Розглянуто синтаксичну організацію заголовків текстів новин в електронних версіях британських та австралійських газет, проаналізовано основні синтаксичні формули побудови заголовків, з‟ясовано особливості синтаксичних формул побудови заголовків. Ключові слова: засоби масової інформації, інформаційні жанри, електронні версії, заголовки текстів новин, синтаксична організація, розповідні речення, питальні речення, спонукальні речення, одноядерні речення та двоядерні речення. Available 3 September 2013.

51

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 Ключові слова

have appealed to the news texts with the purpose of analyzing the language ... to the data, provided by The Newspaper Works, in 2010 the circulation of Herald .... cases it is the indefinite personal subject (You pay for big, fat Greek junket) or ...

289KB Sizes 12 Downloads 31 Views

Recommend Documents

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 УНЗ 1963
Page 1 ... go.html. – Title from the screen. Heinrich 1989: Heinrich K. Kinder, kommt und ... of subjects‟ movement in creating the atmosphere of fear in the novel ...

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 УНЗ 1963 ...
... art in cinema and literature became the object of study of sociology, psychology, .... such a characteristic of movements of subjects as the degree of effort made ...

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 У статті ...
allows to develop new methods and approaches to its research. The purpose of the ..... application of bathos, „Faking Amnesia' and anaphora leads to the creation of a comic effect. .... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beverly_Hills_Cop(10.11.09).

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 29 Ekaterina Vinogradova УДК 81 ...
and channels studies, its word lexicon creation, semantic maps construction ..... Russian language as foreign studying, machine translation and lexicography ...

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 28 Крейдлин 2002: Крейдлин, Г.Е ...
Volume 28. 128. Крейдлин .... Volume 28. 130 meronyms – (a .... The purpose of the article is to define pragmatic functions of the verbalization. © SazonovaYa.

Sofia Oskolskaya (Institute for Linguistic Studies, RAS, Russia ...
Sofia Oskolskaya (Institute for Linguistic Studies, RAS, Russia). Attributive and depictive uses of caritive in Bashkir. Poster presented at ALT 10, Leipzig, Germany, August 15-18, 2013 [email protected]. References. Subject. Attributive – Depictiv

pdf-1267\studies-in-symbolic-interaction-volume-27-studies-in ...
Try one of the apps below to open or edit this item. pdf-1267\studies-in-symbolic-interaction-volume-27-studies-in-symbolic-interaction-by-denzin.pdf.

pdf-1267\studies-in-symbolic-interaction-volume-24-studies-in ...
... the apps below to open or edit this item. pdf-1267\studies-in-symbolic-interaction-volume-24-stu ... -interaction-from-emerald-group-publishing-limited.pdf.

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 30 Функциональный ...
absorbed elements of other languages, to which it is in contact, a language of ..... another general feature, the center of which predicate and determined by it ...

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 30 Функциональный ...
introduction into circulation of the results of development, is a rapid process that is not .... application of results of these studies in the political sphere. .... increased attention to the cognitive-linguistic area and cognitive-linguistic frame

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 29 Наверняка, это не ...
Repeated attempts to study English lexicographical sources have shown that not ... (in comparison with Ukrainian) (ANALYSIS) and editing of English texts with a maximum degree ... example, The Сopenhagen Post Online or Euronews.net.

LINGUISTIC STUDIES. Volume 29 Висновки, подані в ...
series devoted to typological studies of languages. During .... work intensively both on typology and on the Chukchi language: parallel treatment of a number of.

PsycINFO News, Volume 28, Issue 2, 2009 - American Psychological ...
A software platform to analyse the ethical issues of electronic patient pri- vacy policy: The S3P example. Journal of Medical Ethics,. 33, 695-698. Recupero, P. R. ...

PsycINFO News, Volume 28, Issue 1 - American Psychological ...
Jan 20, 2009 - Exporting content to social networking sites such as de.licio.us and digg will take as little as one click. Users will be able to view tables and ...

PsycINFO News | Volume 28, Issue 4 | 2009 - American Psychological ...
Have you ever wanted a more global understanding ... or tests and measures fields more effectively? How to .... social networking sites. ... popular tutorials. Topics ..... scheduled. 10. Read all of the details of the. June 2009 Reload of PsycINFO.

PsycINFO News, Volume 28, Issue 2, 2009 - American Psychological ...
continued on page 2 ... 2. For books: Browse APA's book titles at http://www.apa.org/books/ until you find the ..... www.apa.org/databases/training/webinars.html.

PsycINFO News | Volume 28, Issue 3 | 2009 - American Psychological ...
Automation makes it economically .... their platforms in time for the start of the 2009 Fall semester. .... offered it on the APA platform, on EBSCOhost, and on Ovid.

PsycINFO News, Volume 28, Issue 5 - American Psychological ...
Twitter, and Other Social. Networking Sources. For the 3rd year, APA sponsored the EBSS Research. Forum, where Linda Beebe, senior director of PsycINFO,.

www.rsc.org/softmatter Volume 9 | Number 32 | 28 August 2013 ...
Aug 28, 2013 - Origami-inspired manufacturing can produce complex structures and machines by folding two-dimensional composites into three-dimensional structures. This fabrication technique is potentially less expensive, faster, and easier to transpo

PsycINFO News | Volume 28, Issue 3 | 2009 - American Psychological ...
tion, the bibliographic database offers the most opportunity to add fields and provide new ways to .... just as email and correspondence addresses and affili- ations do. ... With the new HTML on APA PsycNET, they will get full citation informa-.

PsycINFO News | Volume 28, Issue 3 | 2009 - American Psychological ...
Jun 30, 2009 - Classification Code and scroll through the subject categories. Select 3297, Neurological Disorders &. Brain Damage, which will limit your ...