Interjection

In grammar, an interjection or exclamation is a word used to express a particular emotion or sentiment on the part of the speaker. In the past, it was sometimes called an ejaculation, although this is no longer common. Filled pauses such as uh, er, um are also considered interjections. Interjections are often placed at the beginning of a sentence.

An interjection is sometimes expressed as a single word or non-sentence phrase, followed by a punctuation mark. The isolated usage of an interjection does not represent a complete sentence in conventional English writing. Thus, in formal writing, the interjection will be incorporated into a larger sentence clause.

Interjection as a figure of speech refers to the use of one word.[1] For example, lawyers in the United States of America traditionally say: Objection! or soldiers: Fire!.

Examples in English

Conventions like Hi!, Bye! and Goodbye! are interjections, as are exclamations like Cheers! and Hooray!. They are very often characterized by exclamation marks depending on the stress of the attitude or the force of the emotion they are expressing. Well (a short form of "that is well") can also be used as an interjection: "Well! That's great!" or "Well, don't worry." Much profanity takes the form of interjections. Some linguists consider the pro-sentences yes, no, amen and okay as interjections, since they have no syntactical connection with other words and rather work as sentences themselves. Expressions such as "Excuse me!", "Sorry!", "No thank you!", "Oh dear!", "Hey that's mine!", and similar ones often serve as interjections. Interjections can be phrases or even sentences, as well as words, such as "Oh!" "Pooh!" "Wow!" or "sup!".

Phonology

Several English interjections contain sounds, or are sounds as opposed to words, that do not (or very rarely) exist in regular English phonological inventory. For example:

Distinctions

Drawing on earlier writings by Wilhelm Wundt,[2] interjections may be subdivided into primary and secondary interjections.[3]

See also

Look up interjection in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Interjection.
  1. Gladwyn Ferreira. English Kumarbharati Grammar,Language Study & Writing Skills Std.X. Jeevandeep Prakashan Pvt Ltd. pp. 168–. GGKEY:PYF90EN6DCP. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  2. Wundt, Wilhelm (1904). Völkerpsychologie: Eine Untersuchung der Entwicklungsgesetze von Sprache, Mythus und Sitte (2nd ed.). Leipzig: Engelmann.
  3. Wharton, Tim (2003). "Interjections, language, and the 'showing/saying' continuum" (PDF). Pragmatics & Cognition 11 (1): 175. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
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