A. N. Field was born in 1882.
A. N. Field died in 1963.
I'm not sure if this answers your question, but here's a quick introduction to minimalist grammar. Take the sentence I was walking to the field when I saw a gigantic kangaroo. Then you divide it into morphemes: I was walk ing to the field when I saw a gigantic kangaroo. N V V A P D N Ab N V D A N (where N stands for noun, V for verb, A for adjective, P for preposition, D for determiner, and Ab for adverb). What happens is the grammar starts collapsing. Two kinds of words directly next to each other will combine as a single unit and perform the grammatical function of one of the words in the pair, e.g. (A+N)>N or (P+N)>P. Also, (N+V) can > S for sentence. So (walk ing) > A, (the field) > N, (gigantic kangaroo) > N. I was (walking) to (the field) when I saw a (gigantic kangaroo). N V A P N Ab N V D N. Now (to the field)>P, (a gigantic kangaroo)>N I was (walking) (to the field) when I saw (a gigantic kangaroo) N V A P Ab N V N (walking to the field)>A, (saw a gigantic kangaroo)>V I was (walking to the field) when I (saw a gigantic kangaroo). N V A Ab N V (was walking to the field)>V, (I saw a gigantic kangaroo)>S. I (was walking to the field) when (I saw a gigantic kangaroo). N V Ab S (when I saw a gigantic kangaroo)>Ab I (was walking to the field) (when I saw a gigantic kangaroo). N V Ab (was walking to the field when I saw a gigantic kangaroo)>V I (was walking to the field when I saw a gigantic kangaroo) N V (I was walking to the field when I saw a gigantic kangaroo)>S!
N. N. Pisharody was born in 1926.
N. N. Krishnadas was born on 1959-03-12.
Barry Field was born in 1946.
G.C. Field was born in 1887.
Thalia Field was born in 1966.
Max Field was born in 1950.
Sherri Field was born in 1972.
Ron Field was born in 1934.
Tim Field was born in 1952.
Barbara Field was born in 1935.