The البناء اللغوي (النحوي والمعجمي) في قصيدة الخنساء (دراسة تحليلية)
linguistic structure (grammatical and lexical) in the poem Al Khansaa An analytical study
Keywords:
Simple and compound sentence, Nominal, verbal and descriptive sentence,Complete and imperfect sentenceAbstract
The researcher started this article by studying the types of sentence.
Then he dealt with the sentence within the framework of the poem in simplicity and detail, showing the secret of the nominal sentence's dominance over the actual, and the affirmative over the negative.
Then he touched on studying the sentence between short and long, and its temporal extension from the past to the present.
Then he shed light on the poetic dictionaries and their semantic dimensions in the text of the poem, indicating the benefit of lexical study in a text.
Finally, he mentioned the researcher's findings during writing the article. It is as follows:
Simple and compound sentence
Nominal, verbal and descriptive sentence
The original and subsidiary sentence
Complete and imperfect sentence
In terms of general significance, the sentence is either declarative (affirming, negating, confirming), or constructive, and is either imperative (command, prohibition, interrogative, exhortation, exhortation), or emotional (wish, beg, oath, exclamation, praise or slander, scar or mayday).
The researcher started this article by studying the types of sentence.
Then he dealt with the sentence within the framework of the poem in simplicity and detail, showing the secret of the nominal sentence's dominance over the actual, and the affirmative over the negative.
Then he touched on studying the sentence between short and long, and its temporal extension from the past to the present.
Then he shed light on the poetic dictionaries and their semantic dimensions in the text of the poem, indicating the benefit of lexical study in a text.
Finally, he mentioned the researcher's findings during writing the article. It is as follows:
Simple and compound sentence
Nominal, verbal and descriptive sentence
The original and subsidiary sentence
Complete and imperfect sentence
In terms of general significance, the sentence is either declarative (affirming, negating, confirming), or constructive, and is either imperative (command, prohibition, interrogative, exhortation, exhortation), or emotional (wish, beg, oath, exclamation, praise or slander, scar or mayday).