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A.  One-summit  units,  which  have  one  meaningful
                            constituent (e. g. to give up, to make out, to pull out, to be tired, to
                            be surprised);
                                  B. Two-summit and multi-summit units  which have two
                            or  more  meaningful  constituents  (e.  g.  black  art,  first  night,
                            common sense, to fish in troubled waters).
                                  Within  each  of  these  large  groups the  phraseological  units
                            are classified according to the category of parts of speech of the
                            summit constituent. So, one-summit units are subdivided into: a)
                            verbal-adverbial  units  equivalent to  verbs  in  which  the  semantic
                            and the grammatical centers coincide in the first constituent (e. g.
                            to give up); b) units equivalent to verbs which have their semantic
                            centre in the second constituent and their grammatical centre in the
                            first (e. g. to be tired); c) prepositional-substantive units equivalent
                            either to adverbs or to copulas and having their semantic centre in
                            the  substantive  constituent  and  no  grammatical  centre  (e.  g.  by
                            heart, by means of).
                                  Two-summit  and  multi-summit  phraseological  units  are
                            classified into:
                                  a)  attributive-substantive  two-summit  units  equivalent  to
                            nouns (e. g. black art);
                                  b)  verbal-substantive  two-summit  units  equivalent  to  verbs
                            (e. g. to take the floor),
                                  c) phraseological repetitions equivalent to adverbs (e. g. now
                            or never);
                                  d) adverbial multi-summit units (e. g. every other day через).
                                  Professor    Smirnitsky     also    distinguishes    proper
                            phraseological units which, in his classification system, are units
                            with  non-figurative  meanings,  and  idioms,  that  is,  units  with
                            transferred meanings based on a metaphor.
                                  Professor  A.V.  Kunin,  the  leading  Russian  authority  on
                            English  phraseology,  pointed  out  certain  inconsistencies  in  this
                            classification  system.  First  of  all,  the  subdivision  into
                            phraseological  units  (as  non-idiomatic  units)  and  idioms













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