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Transcript of It is common in grammatical theory to distinguish between main and secondary parts of a sentence....
![Page 1: It is common in grammatical theory to distinguish between main and secondary parts of a sentence. Besides these two types there are elements which are.](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022052414/56649d895503460f94a6f71c/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
P A R T S
O F A S E N T E N C E
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It is common in grammatical theory to distinguish
between main and secondary parts of a sentence. Besides
these two types there are elements which are said to stand
outside the sentence structure.
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There are two generally recognized main parts of the
sentence - the subject and the predicate. The reason for
calling the subject and the predicate the main parts of the
sentence is that they constitute the backbone of the
sentence: without them the sentence would not exist at all,
whereas all other (secondary) parts serve to define or
modify either the subject or the predicate, or each other.
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THE SUBJECT
The subject is one of the two main parts of the sentence.
(1) It denotes the thing which action or characteristic is
expressed by the predicate. (2) It is not dependent on any other
part of the sentence. (3) Morphologically it may be expressed
by different parts of speech, the most frequent ones being: a
noun in the common case, a personal pronoun in the nominative
case, a demonstrative pronoun occasionally, a substantivized
adjective, a numeral, an infinitive, and a gerund, even by a
phrase.
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Types of the Subject
From the point of view of its grammatical value the
subject may be notional and formal.
The notional subject can be
personal (denotes persons: The teacher paused for him to
continue. J.F.Kennedy was elected president in 1960.) or
non-personal (denotes non-persons, including animals,
whose name may be substituted by it or they. Look at the
cat. It is very small. To deny this was impossible.)
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The formal subject can be of 3 types.
The first type is with impersonal it, which is used in sentences
describing various states of nature, time, distance, measurements,
characteristics of the environment: It is cold today.
The introductory formal subject is found in 2 patterns of sentences:
o those with introductory (anticipatory) it, which introduces the
notional subject expressed by an infinitive, a gerund, an
infinitive/gerundial phrase, or a clause: It’s impossible to deny
this. It gave him a pain in the head to walk. It was too late to
start;
o and with introductory there. There was a needle and thread in
her fingers. Once upon a time there lived a king. There is no
talking about it.
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THE PREDICATE
The predicate is one of the two main parts of the
sentence.
(1) It denotes the action or property of the thing
expressed by the subject. The predicate is the member of a
predication which asserts something about the subject, it
characterizes the subject as to its action, state or quality.
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(2) It is not dependent on any other part of the
sentence.
(3) Ways of expressing the predi cate are varied and
their structure will better be considered under the heading
of types of predicate. Among them there is: a finite verb
form, and a variety of phrases of the following patterns:
"finite verb + infini tive", "link verb + noun", "link verb +
adjective", "link verb + preposition + noun", etc.
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Types of the Predicate
Predicates may be classified in two ways, one of
which is based on their structure (simple and compound),
and the other on their morphological characteristics
(verbal and nominal).
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If the structural classification is taken as the basic
one the following types are obtained:
A Simple predicate B Compound predicate
(1) Verbal (1) Verbal
(2) Nominal (2) Nominal
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If the morphological classification is taken as the
basic one the result would be the following:
A Verbal predicate B Nominal predicate
(1) Simple (1) Simple
(2) Compound (2) Compound
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The Simple Nominal Predicate
The Simple Nominal Predicate, that is, a predicate
consisting merely of a noun or an adjective, without a link
verb, is rare in English, but it is nevertheless a living type
and must be recognized as such. One of the spheres of its
use is found in sentences where the immediate
neighbourhood of the subject noun and the predicate noun
or adjective is used to suggest the impossibility or
absurdity of the idea.
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Sentences with this kind of simple nominal
predicate are always exclamatory, that is, they are
pronounced with the exclama tory intonation, and have an
exclamation mark in writing. My ideas obsolete!!!!!!! (with
7 exclamation marks) (B.Shaw) expresses the speaker's
indignation at hearing his ideas characterized as obsolete by
a younger man. It would not do, according to Prof. Ilyish, to
call such sentences elliptical, since the link verb cannot be
added without completely changing the meaning of the
sentence.
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There are also some rare types, such as in the text
of weather forecast, and the like, for instance:
Wind southerly, later veering westward, sea slight,
etc.
Such sentences as these read like passages from a
questionnaire, the adjective answering a question referring
to the thing denoted by the noun (wind, sea, etc.).
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The Simple Verbal Predicate
Lead sinks.
I haven’t finished my work yet.
The entrance door was closed at 12 sharp.
I will get in touch with you later this week.
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The Compound Verbal Predicate
A rather considerable number of verbs can be
followed by an infinitive, some of them with, others
without the particle to. Among such verbs are shall, will,
should, would, can, may, must (without to); ought, wish,
want, desire, hate, fear, begin, start, continue, omit, forget,
remember, etc. (with to).
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The relation between these phrases and parts of the
sentence is of course not the same in all cases. The phrases
shall, should, will, would + infinitive, which consti tute tense
or mood forms of the verb, do not belong here. Thus, the
phrase shall write is a form of the verb write and,
consequently, it is a simple verbal predicate. The phrases
with the verbs can, may, must, ought to constitute a
compound verbal predicate, as well as the phrases with the
verbs wish, want, desire, hate, fear, begin, start, continue.
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The Compound Nominal Predicate
The compound nominal predicate always consists of a
link verb (also called copula) and a predicative, which
may be expressed by various parts of speech, usually a
noun, an adjective, also a stative, or an adverb (The
lesson is over). Of ten enough the predicative is
represented by a phrase (“preposition + noun").
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The idea of "link" suggests that its function is to connect
the predicative with the subject. The true function of a link verb
is not a connecting function. It expresses the tense and the mood
in the predicate. The link verb be, which expresses the
grammatical categories, is rightly considered to be the most
abstract of all link verbs, that is, the one most devoid of any
meaning of its own. Other link verbs have some lexical
meaning, for instance become, get, continue, grow, turn:
Then he grew thirsty and went indoors.
But presently the sea turned rough.
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S E C O N D A R Y P A R T S
The three traditional secondary parts of a
sentence are object, attribute, and adverbial modifier.
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The object is usually defined as a secondary part
of the sentence, referring to a part of the sentence
expressed by a verb, a noun, a pronoun, an adjective,
a numeral, or an adverb, and denoting a thing to
which the action passes on, or denoting an action as
object of another action.
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There are several types of objects:
non-prepositional and prepositional;
direct (objects expressing the thing which is sent, shown, given;
denotes the thing affected by the action denoted by the predicate
verb) and indirect (objects expressing persons to whom the thing is
sent; the person toward whom the thing is moved):
We sent them a present.
You showed my friend your pictures.
When the two objects occur together in a sentence, they are
distinguished by the relative places in the sentence, that is, by word-
order: the indirect object, if it is non-prepositional, stands first, and the
direct object comes after it.
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The attribute is a secondary part of the sentence
modifying a part of the sentence ex pressed by a noun, a
pronoun, a cardinal numeral and any substantivized
word, and characterizing the thing as to its quality or
property.
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The adverbial modifier is a secondary part of
the sentence modifying a part of the sentence expressed
by a verb, a verbal noun, an adjec tive, or an adverb, and
serving to characterize an action or a property as to its
quality or intensity, or to indicate the way an action is
done, the time, place, cause, purpose or condition, with
which the action or the manifestation of the quality is
connected.
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There are several ways of classifying adverbial
modifiers:
(1) according to their meaning: adverbial modifiers of
place, time, condition, manner of an action, degree of a
property, purpose, etc.
(2) according to their morphological peculiarities,
(3) according to the type of their head word.
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To be continued.