Phraselevel
Phraselevel is a term used in linguistics and related fields to refer to the level of analysis that deals with phrases as the primary units, rather than individual words or larger clauses. In phraselevel analysis, sentences are decomposed into constituents called phrases, such as noun phrases, verb phrases, prepositional phrases, and others. This level sits between word-level granularity and clause-level analysis and is central to phrase-structure grammars and constituency parsing.
In practice, phraselevel analysis uses a hierarchical tree structure where phrases can contain smaller phrases and
Example: In "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog," the phrase The quick brown fox
Cross-linguistic note: phrase structure varies across languages, but the concept of hierarchical constituents remains a common