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Noun phrase

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In grammatical theory, a noun phrase (abbreviated NP) is a phrase whose head is a noun or a pronoun, optionally accompanied by a set of modifiers. <ref>

    "Noun Phrases - Glossary Definition - UsingEnglish.com" (with examples),
    UsingEnglish.com, 21 August 2006, UsingEnglish.com/glossary webpage:
    UEng-noun-phrase.

</ref> The modifiers may be:

In English, for some purposes, noun phrases can be treated as single grammatical units. This is most noticeable in the syntax of the English genitive case. In a phrase such as The king of Sparta's wife, the possessive clitic "-'s" is not added to the king who actually has the wife, but instead to Sparta, as the end of the whole phrase. The clitic modifies the entire phrase the king of Sparta.

[edit] Notes

<references/>de:Nominalphrase sv:Nominalfras

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