Transitivity System - Functional Grammar
Transitivity System - Functional Grammar
I.
Introduction
II.
Transitivity system
1.
Material processes
2.
Mental processes
3.
Relational processes
4.
5.
6.
Circumstances
III.
By Mai Vn Trng
By Mai Vn Trng
By Nguyn Qunh Trang
By Trn Th Minh Yn
References
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Metafunctions
SFL is concerned with how the speakers generate utterances and texts to convey
their intended meanings through the generalized metafunctions that relate
language to the outside world where interactants and their social roles matter.
According to SFL, language has 3 metafunctions of ideational, interpersonal, and
textual reflected in a huge system network of meaning potentials including
subnetworks of Transitivity, Thing, and Quality with specific set of semantic
features for an utterance introduction.
Metafunctions can be paralleled to grammatical categories of context of situation
like:
2. Ideational metafunction
Ideational metafunction focuses on the content of a discourse: what kinds of
activities are undertaken, and how the participants in these activities are
described, how they are classified & what they are composed of.
(Martin and
Rose, 2003:66)
Ideational metafunction provides grammatical resources at clause rank to
construe the inner and outer experience or goings-on of the world as the domain
of functions and meanings of the world through the systems of transitivity.
(Haratyan, 2011:261)
Ideational metafunction as two components: logical & experiential functions.
(Haratyan, 2011:261)
3. The representational meaning
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This means that the sentence has to involve at least two participants
E.g. I bought a car (Actor I. Process- buy. Goal-car)
Some sentences may have three participants
E.g. I gave her a flower
b. Descriptive: involving a non-directed action since the sentence is associated with just
one participant (called intransitive)
E.g. The recruits marched (Actor- the recruits. Process- march)
c. Nuclear: associated with either one or two participants
E.g. John opened the door
The door opened
The door was opened by John
4. Process, participant, and circumstance
Our most powerful impression of experience is that it consists of goings-on
happening, doing, sensing, meaning, and being and becoming. All these goings-on are
sorted out in the grammar of the clause. Thus as well as being a mode of action, of giving
and demanding goods-&-services and information, the clause is also a mode of reflection,
of imposing order on the endless variation and flow of events. The grammatical system
by which this is achieved is TRANSITIVITY. The transitivity system construes the
world of experience into a manageable set of PROCESS TYPES. (Halliday, 1994:106)
a. The process
Process is a powerful concept which represents the possible worlds as consisting of
goings-on: of doing, happening, feeling, and being. Halliday (1994: 106-107) states that
the processes in a language like English are construed by the transitivity system. These
goings-on are expressed through the grammar of the sentence (or clause). Apart from the
structural meaning, the meaning of the sentence also expresses the experiential aspect,
called transitivity.
Processes can be classified into: material, relational, mental, verbal, behavioral, and
existential processes.
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b. Participants
Can be a person, place or object.
Usually realized by NOMINAL GROUP.
Answers the questions: Who? Which? What? To Whom? For Whom? about the
process.
Example: I played football. (I and football are the participants)
c. Circumstances
Is the background against which the process takes place.
Is usually realized through a prepositional phrase, adverbial group, or even noun
group.
Example: I played football in the garden.
II. TRANSITIVITY SYSTEM
1. Material process
a. Definitions
According to Halliday, 1985:110, material processes are those that express our outer
experiences. Material processes are processes of doing. "Doing here means action".
They express the notion that some entity does something which may be done to other
entity.
b. Characteristics
Material processes may involve one or two entities. It means that there are 2 participants:
an ACTOR + a GOAL.
E.g.
process
goal
process
goal
process
goal
2. Mental processes
a. Definition
Mental processes are those that express our inner experiences. Mental processes involve
two entities - two participants: a SENSER (the conscious being that feels, sees or thinks)
and a PHENOMENON (that which is sensed, felts, thought or seen).
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E.g.
Mary
liked
senser process
the gift
phenomenon
Please type
It pleases me
It frightens me
It amazes me
It puzzles me
It delights me
It upsets me
It impresses me
Mental processes are processes of feeling, thinking and seeing. They are not kinds of
doing, and cannot be probed or substituted by do.
E.g.
Mary sold the gift. What did Mary do with the gift?
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But
(thing)
(event)-finished process
I love flower.
(thing)
(situation)
(thing)
(thought)
3. Relational processes
a. Definition
Relational processes are those that connect our experiences. They are processes of
being.
b. Characteristics:
In relational clauses, there are two parts of being: something is said to be something
else. In other words, a relation is being set up between two entities.
E.g.
Jane is beautiful.
Tomorrow is my birthday
Peter has a piano.
x is a
+ (2) circumstantial:
about, along)
+ (3) possessive x has a
Each of these comes in to distinct modes:
+ (a) attributive
a is an attribute of x
+ (b) identifying
a is the identity of x
Intensive
(2) Circumstantial
(i) Attributive
(ii) Identifying
Sarah is wise
The fair is on a
Monday
(3) Possessive
is
a poet
Sarah
Carrier
is
Process: intensive
wise
Attribute
b. Characteristics
The nominal group functioning as Attribute is typically indefinite - it has Adj or
common Noun as a head. It cannot be a proper noun or a pronoun.
The verb realizing the process is one of the ascriptive class:
+ [phase: inceptive] become, turn (into), grow (into), get, go
+ [phase: duration] remain, stay (as), keep
+ [phase: appearance] seem, appear, qualify as, turn out, end up (as)
+ [phase: sense-perception] look, sound, smell, feel, taste (like)
+ [neutral] be, feel
The probe for such clauses is What? How? Or what.like?
The clauses are not reversible, there is no passive form
3.2. Intensive processes: identifying
a. Definition
In the identifying mode, something has an identity assigned to it. One identity is being
used to identified another: x is identified by a. Structurally, we label x- element, which
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is to be identified, as the Identified, and the a-element, which serves as identity, as the
Identifier.
Examples:
Mr. Garrick
played
Hamlet
must be
you
Alice
Identified
is
Process: intensive
b. Characteristics
The nominal group realizing the function Identifier is definite
The verb realizing the process one from equative classes:
[role]
[sign]
[equation]
[kind/ part]
[significance]
[example]
[symbol]
[neutral]
is
is
Alice
Identifier
is
Alice
Identifier
is
am
I
Identifier/ token
Subject
I
Identified/ token
S
am (= play)
Process ( active)
the villain
Identifier/ value
C
The villain
Identifier/ Value
S
is (= is played by)
Process ( passive)
me
Identified/ Token
C
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is
about a poor boy
Process: intensive Attribute:
circumstantial
My story
Carrier
concerns
Process:
a poor boy
Attribute
circumstantial
3.4.2. Identifying
3.4.2.1. Circumstance as participants
The participants- identified and identified are circumstantial elements of time, place and
so on. The relation between the participants is simply one of sameness. It can be
reversible.
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E.g.
Is
Process:
Peters
Attribute:
intensive
Possession
Peter
Carrier:
Has
Process:
A piano
Attribute:
Possessor
Possession
Possessed
The piano
Carrier:
Belongs to
Process:
Peter
Attribute:
Possessed
Possession
Possessor
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The piano
Identified/ Token
Is
Process: intensive
Possessed
Peters
Identified/ value
Possessor
Is
Process: intensive
Possessor
Peter
Identified/ Token
Peters
Identifier/ Value
The piano
Identifier/ Token
Possessed
Owns
Process:
The piano
Identifier/ Value
Possession
The piano
Identified/ Value
Is owned
Process:
By Peter
Identifier/ Token
Possession
4. Other processes
4.1. Behavioral Processes
a. Definition
Behavioral processes are those describing physiological and psychological behavior
like coughing, breathing, smiling, dreaming, and staring. They are partly like the
material and the mental processes
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b. Characteristics
The participant who is behaving, labeled BEHAVER, is typically a conscious being
SENSER, but the process is grammatically more like one of doing
E.g. She is smiling
c. Classification
a. Process of consciousness (near mental processes) represented as forms of
behavior: watch, stare, listen, think, dream
b. Verbal processes as behavior (near verbal processes): chatter, grumble, talk
c. Physiological processes manifesting states of consciousness: cry, smile, frown,
sigh, snarl, whine
d. Other physiological processes: cough, sleep
e. Bodily postures and pastimes (near material processes): sing, dance, lie down, sit
(down/ up)
4.2. Verbal Processes
a. Definition
Verb processes are processes of saying. They are representing symbolic relationships
constructed in human consciousness and enacted in the form language.
b. Characteristics
Verbal processes are processes of saying (tell, insult, praise, slander, abuse, flatter,
promise)
They involving four entities: a sayer, a verbiage, a target, a receiver
E.g. They complained about Peggy to the principal
sayer
process
target
receiver
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Existential processes represent something that exists or happens. They are intermediate
between material and relational processes, and involve 2 entities: the EXISTENT and the
process
E.g. There comes a huge man
process
existent
Range occurrences
1. Material processes
2. Verbal processes
3. Behavioral processes
4. Mental processes
6. Circumstances
Circumstantial in Hallidays view
Type
Location
Extent
Manner
Cause
Contingency
Sub-types
Temporal (when?)
Spatial (where?)
Temporal (for how long?)
Spatial (how far?)
Means/quality/comparison
Examples
Get up at six oclock
Work in the kitchen
Stay (for) two hours
Walk (for) seven miles
The pig was beaten with a stick
Reason (why?)
Purpose (what for?)
Behalf (who for?)
Condition/ concession/
earthquake
I love her because she is rich
She went out for lunch
I am writing on behalf of Aunt Jane
Despite the rain, the excursion was a great
default
success
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Accompaniment
Role
Matter
Angle
else?)
Guise (what as?)
Product (what into?)
(what about?)
(from what point of view?)
REFERENCES
Halliday, M. A. K. (1994) An Introduction to Functional Grammar. Second edition.
London: Edward Arnold.
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