By Maung Maung Aye

 

Introduction

English occupies a unique position globally, varying from a primary language in nations like the United States and Australia to a second language in countries such as India and Singapore. In contexts like Myanmar, it is taught as a foreign language, meaning it is distant from daily communication. This distance presents distinct challenges for learners, often manifesting as systematic grammatical errors. This article analyzes these errors, specifically those related to the eight parts of speech, to illuminate their causes and forms. An error is defined as a grammatically incorrect, systematic deviation from the standard norms of the target language. Theoretical Framework: Causes and classi­fication of errors

 

Errors generally stem from two sources:

I. Interlingual Causes: These result from mother tongue interference, where learners transfer structures from their first language to Eng­lish. This leads to “language transfer errors”, especially when the languages are structurally different.

 

Example: “I go to school with foot every day.” (Mother tongue influence on preposition use)

 

II. Intralingual Causes: These originate from the complexities of English itself and in­clude:

 

1. Cross-association: Confusion be­tween two similar English struc­tures.

2. False Analogy: Incorrectly ap­plying a learned rule to a new, dissimilar situation.

3. Incomplete Application of Rules: Failing to fully implement a gram­matical rule.

4. Overgeneralization: Extending a rule beyond its correct bounda­ries.

Errors can also be categorized by their form (omission, addition, substitu­tion, mis-ordering) and their linguistic lev­el (phonological, morphological, lexical, syntactic).

 

Error Analysis by parts of speech

Regarding nouns, mistakes frequent­ly involve countability, pluralization, and article usage.

e.g. (1) I have many homeworks to do.

(Correct: I have a lot of homework to do)

e.g. (2) She is a honest woman.

(Correct: She is an honest wom­an.)

 

For instance, the sentence “I have many homeworks to do” demonstrates overgeneralization through the addition of “-s” to the uncountable noun “homework”, resulting in a morphological error. Mean­while, “She is a honest woman” shows an incomplete application of rules; the focus on the consonant ‘h’ leads to the substitu­tion of “a” for “an”, which is required before the vowel sound /ɒ/, constituting another morphological error.

 

In the category of pronouns, common mistakes include incorrect case and pos­sessive forms e.g. (1) Me and my friend went to the cinema.

 

(Correct: My friend and I went to the cinema)

e.g. (2) Is this book your?

Correct: Is this book yours?)

The example “Me and my friend went to the cinema” arises from a false analogy with informal spoken English, where the object pronoun “me” is incor­rectly substituted for the subject pronoun “I”, making it a syntactic error. Another error, “Is this book your?”, stems from overgeneralization, where the possessive adjective “your” is used instead of the possessive pronoun “yours”; this omis­sion of ‘-s’ is a morphological error.

Verbs are a major source of error, covering tense, aspect, agreement, and form.

 

e.g. (1) He go to school every day.

(Correct: He goes to school every day)

e.g. (2) “She has buy a new car.’’

(Correct: She has bought a new car.)

e.g. (3) I am agree with you.

(Correct: I agree with you)

 

The sentence “He go to school every day” results from overgeneralization and the omission of the third-person ‘-s’, a morphological error. “She has buy a new car” illustrates an incomplete application of rules, where the base form “buy” is substituted for the required past par­ticiple “bought”, leading to a syntactic error. Additionally, “I am agree with you” is caused by interlingual transfer from languages like Spanish or French, where the addition of “am” creates a syntactic error.

 

Errors with adjectives often involve comparative/superlative formation and word order.

e.g. (1) This is the most big city.

(Correct: This is the biggest city.)

e.g. (2) They live in a red big car.

(Correct: They live in a big red car.)

“This is the most big city” shows overgeneralization through the incorrect addition of “most” and omission of the superlative suffix “-est” for the mono­syllabic adjective “big”, a morphological error. “They live in a red big car” demon­strates interlingual transfer, where the native language’s adjective order causes a mis-ordering, which is a syntactic error.

 

e.g. You must drive careful.

(Correct: You must drive care­fully.)

For adverbs, a typical mistake is us­ing an adjective form where an adverb is required, as seen in “You must drive careful”. This stems from a false analogy with adjective patterns and involves the omission of the ‘-ly’ suffix, making it a morphological error.

 

Prepositions, as highly idiomatic elements, are a frequent and complex source of error. Common issues include using prepositions unnecessarily (e.g., “Come to here”), adding them after tran­sitive verbs (e.g., “visited to the pagoda”), or substituting incorrect ones. For exam­ple, “They left to Yangon” should be “left for Yangon,” a substitution error caused by interlingual transfer. Similarly, “She quarrels against her friends” results from a false analogy with other verb-preposi­tion patterns, substituting “against” for the correct “with”.

 

Errors with conjunctions involve us­ing words that express incorrect logical relationships.

e.g., I was tired, but I went to bed early.

 

(Correct: I was tired, so I went to bed early.)

In “I was tired, but I went to bed early,” the conjunction “but” is substi­tuted for “so” due to cross-association, confusing contrast with result, which is a syntactic error.

Errors with interjections involve cul­turally inappropriate expressions.

 

e.g. Saying ‘’ Congrats!” in response to a sneeze.

(Correct: Bless you!)

For instance, saying “Congrats!” in response to a sneeze, instead of “Bless you!”, is a substitution based on a false analogy and is classified as a pragmatic error.

Key remedial strategies to overcome the grammatical errors:

 

1. Use Contrastive Analysis:

Explicitly compare English and Myanmar grammar to predict and prevent transfer errors (e.g., with prepositions, articles, verb forms).

2. Teach “Chunks”: Present prep­ositions and verb forms as fixed phrases (e.g., listen to, has gone) rather than isolated words.

3. Employ Visual Aids: Use time­lines for tenses, charts for ad­jective order, and real objects for spatial prepositions.

4. Focus on Rules and Practice: Give clear, contextualized rules followed by structured practice – from controlled drills (fill-in-the-blanks) to communicative tasks.

5. Promote Self-Monitoring: En­courage learners to keep per­sonal error logs to track and correct recurring mistakes by part of speech.

 

In conclusion, analyzing grammat­ical errors through the framework of the eight parts of speech reveals sys­tematic, traceable patterns stemming from interlingual transfer and intralin­gual complexities, which in turn provides educators with a diagnostic blueprint for targeted remediation; by understanding the specific causes and forms of errors in nouns, verbs, prepositions, and other cat­egories, teachers can implement focused strategies like contrastive analysis and chunk learning, thereby transforming mistakes from signs of failure into es­sential, instructive steps in the language acquisition process.