Units of speech include clauses, phrases, parenthesis, and appositives. There are several individual syntactical tags that may be attached to individual words in a clause. These and other information stored with syntactical tags are defined below. The letter designators listed below correspond to the labels used within the Syntax moduleAny Bible text, or other single tool that can be read in Accordance, including reference texts and articles; may also be referred to as content.
Clause: a unit of grammatical organization, consisting of a subject and predicate.
Clause Types
Phrase: A small group of words standing together as a conceptual unit, typically forming a component of a clause, and lacking its own predication.
Phrase Types
Parenthesis, T: A clause that interrupts the flow of an ‘argument’, whether the argument is at its core chronological (i.e., a narrative) or logical (i.e., an exposition, as in, e.g., many psalms).
Example 1: "And the Nephilim were in the land in those days (and also afterwards), when the Sons of God came to the Daughters of Man ... " (Gen 6:4)
Example 2: "And the sons of Noah who came out from the Ark were Shem, Ham, and Japheth (Ham was the father of Canaan)." (Gen 9:18)
Appositive, X: A clause or phrase that elaborates on a preceding clause or phrase of the same type.
Example: "And Cain said to Abel, his brother ... " (Gen 4:8)
Example: "Two by two they came to Noah, to the ark." (Gen 7:9)
This is the full list of tags that may be attached to individual words in a clause (some necessarily overlap with those above):