The Verb Phrase
The Verb Phrase
The verb phrase is the clause constituent that functions as a predicator in the mood structure of
the clause. The verb phrase is the expansion of a verb in the same way that the noun phrase is the
expansion of a noun. As a word class (i.e. in terms of parts of speech), verbs can be divided into
three major classes according to their function in the VP:
- the open class of lexical verbs
- the closed classes of primary auxiliary verbs and modal auxiliary verbs
If there is only one verb in VP, it is a main verb. If there is more than one verb, the final one is
the main verb, the other(s) that come in between are auxiliaries.
The syntactic features of the operator
Operators evince the following syntactic features:
a) They can be marked for negation, often enclitically, i.e. to negate a finite clause we use
not immediately after the operator.
b) The operator is placed before the subject in interrogative clauses and in certain marked
structures: Only then did he realize what a mess he had got himself into. Will he speak
first? At no time was the entrance left unguarded.
c) The operator can carry nuclear stress to mark a finite clause as positive rather than
negative. You must speak to the teacher! But I have spoken to him.
d) The operator functions in a range of elliptical clauses where the rest of the predication is
omitted. The clause is understood to repeat the omitted part: Wont you try again? Yes I
will.
e) The operator is the verbal element that appears in tag questions: you havent read this
book, have you? I am your best friend, arent I?
If there is no operator in corresponding declarative sentences, the empty operator do is used
under the above conditions. The use of the operator do is termed do-support. The main verbs be
and have are operators in the following sentences:
I havent a car.
Is she your sister?
The structure of the Verb Phrase
Finite VPs
A finite VP is a verb phrase in which the first or only word is a finite verb, the rest of the VP (if
any) consisting of non-finite verbs. Finite VPs can be distinguished as follows:
a) Finite VPs can occur as the VP of independent clauses.
b) Finite VPs have tense contrast, i.e. the distinction between present and past tenses. He is
a journalist now. /Vs./ He worked as a travel agent last summer.
c) There is person concord and number concord between the subject of a clause and the
finite verb phrase. Concord is particularly clear with the present tense of the verb to be.
But with most full verbs overt concord is restricted to a contrast between the 3 rd person
singular present and other persons or plural number. With modal auxiliaries there is no
overt concord.
d) Finite VPs have mood which indicates the factual, nonfactual or counterfactual status of
the predication. In contrast to the unmarked indicative mood, we distinguish the marked
moods imperative (used to express commands or other directive speech acts) and
subjunctive (used to express a wish, a recommendation).
A clause with a finite verb phrase as its verbal element is called a finite (verb) clause. Similarly, a
clause with a nonfinite verb phrase as its verbal element is called a nonfinite (verb) clause.
Nonfinite VPs
The infinitive, the ing-participle and the ed-participle are the nonfinite forms of the verb. Hence
any verb phrase in which one of these forms is the first or only word (disregarding the infinitive
marker to) is a nonfinite verb phrase. Such verb phrases do not normally occur as the verb phrase
of an independent clause. The verb phrases in which the first element is a modal auxiliary are
always finite verb phrases. Compare the following:
Finite VPs
He smokes.
Mary is having a smoke.
He must be crazy to smoke 40 a day.
You have been smoking all day.
It is essential that he smoke fewer cigarettes.
Dont smoke so much.
Nonfinite VPs
To smoke like that must be dangerous.
I regret having started to smoke.
The cigars smoked here tend to be expensive.
That was the last cigarette to have been smoked by me.
fold opposition (past-present-future) is reduced to two tenses: the present tense and the past
tense, which typically refer to present and past time respectively.
Stative and dynamic senses of verbs
We draw a distinction between stative and dynamic senses in which verbs are used to refer to
situations. Verbs like be, have and know have stative senses when they refer to a single unbroken
state of affairs.
I have known John all my life.
Verbs like drive, speak have dynamic senses when they are used with the present perfect to refer
to a sequence of separate events.
I have driven sports cars for years.
A verb may shift in sense from one category to another. Have is usually stative:
She has two sisters.
But it has a dynamic sense in:
We have dinner at Maxims quite frequently.
Dynamic verb senses can regularly occur with the imperative and progressive, but stative
verb senses cannot.
Learn how to swim!
I am learning how to swim.
Tense
Simple present tense for present time
(a) The state present is used with stative verb senses to refer to a single unbroken state of
affairs that has existed in the past, exists now, and is likely to continue to exist in the
future. It includes the timeless present which refers to eternal truths such as
(b) The habitual present is used with dynamic verb senses to refer to events that repeatedly
occur without limitation on their extension into the past or future. Like the state present,
the habitual present includes the timeless present
Water boils at 100 C.
Whereas the state present always refers to something that applies at the time of speaking or
writing, this is very often not so for the habitual present. We can say
Bill drinks heavily
when Bill is not actually drinking.
It is a characteristic of the habitual present that one can easily add a frequency adverbial (e.g.
often, once a day, every year, etc.) to specify the frequency of the event.
(c) The instantaneous present is used with dynamic verb senses to refer to a single event
with little or no duration that occurs at the time of speaking or writing. It is used only in
certain restricted situations:
- in commentaries: Black passes to Fernandez.
- in self-commentaries: I enclose a form of application.
- With performative verbs to refer to speech acts performed by uttering the sentences: We
acknowledge your letter. I apologize for my behaviour.
Simple present for past and future
There are three additional uses for the simple present that are best seen as extended
interpretations of the basic meanings listed above.
(a) The historic present/vivid present refers to past time and is characteristic narrative style
in familiar conversations.
Just as we arrived, up comes Ben and slaps me on the back as if were life-long friends
It is also used as stylistically marked device in fictional narrative for imaginary events in the
past:
The crowd swarms around the gateway, excitement grows as suddenly the hero makes his
entrance.
(b) The simple present is optionally used to refer to the past with verbs of communication
and/or reception of communication to suggest that the information communicated is still
valid:
Jack tells me that the position is still vacant.
I hear that you need an assistant.
I understand that the game has been postponed.
(c) In main clauses, the simple present typically occurs with time-position adverbials to
suggest a future event is certain to take place:
The plane leaves for London at 8 oclock tonight.
The use of the simple present for future time is much more common in subordinate clauses,
particularly in conditional and temporal clauses.
Hell do it if you pay him
Ill let you know as soon as I hear from her
Somewhat akin to the other optional uses of the simple present for past time is its use in
reference to writers and their works.
Dickens draws his characters from the London underworld of his time.
Aspect
Aspect is a grammatical category that reflects the way in which the meaning of a verb is viewed
with respect to time. There are two aspects in English, the perfect and the progressive which may
combine in a complex verb phrase and are marked for present and past tense:
- present perfect
present progressive
- past perfect
past progressive
-
The use of the present perfect for recent events may imply that the result of the recent event still
applies.
Hes broken his arms (>> His arm is still broken)
The train has arrived on platform 4 (>> The train is now on platform 4)
The simple past is often used in place of the present perfect for recent events especially in
Am E:
I just got a new job.
Some adverbials co-occur with the present perfect and not with the simple past.
They include the adverb since, prepositional phrases and clauses introduced by since
(since Monday; since I met you), the phrases till/ up to now and so far. The simple past
must be used if the implicit time period does not reach up to the present moment:
She gave an interview only once in her life. (She can give no more interviews since she is
dead)
Did you see the production of King Lear at the National Theatre? (You can no longer do
so, because the production has closed)
If will or shall is combined with future, the resulting future perfect conveys the
meaning past in future
By next week, they will have completed their contract.
A similar meaning may be conveyed with other modals:
By next week, they may have completed their contract (It is possible that they will have
completed)
In temporal clauses future perfect is replaced by present perfect.
The past perfect
The past perfect refers to a time earlier that another past time. It may represent the past of the
simple past:
They had moved into the house before the baby was born.
The simple past can often replace the past perfect in such cases if the time relationship
between the two situations is clear:
They moved into the house before the baby was born.
The past perfect may also represent the past of the present perfect.
She had owned the house since her parents died entails that she does not own it now
She has owned the house since her parents died entails that she still owns the house
The past perfect has special uses similar to those for the simple past.
(a) In indirect speech constructions it indicates a backshift into the more remote past.
I told her the parcel had not arrived.
(b) The attitudinal past perfect refers more politely than the simple past to a present
state of mind.
I had wondered whether you are/were free now.
(c) The hypothetical past perfect is used in certain subordinate clauses especially ifclauses to imply that the situation did not occur.
If I had been there, it would have not happened (>> I wasnt there )
Progressive aspect
The progressive aspect focuses on the situation as being in progress at a particular time.
Therefore it may imply that the situation has limited duration and that it is not complete.
(a) Generally, verbs with stative senses do not occur in the progressive, since states
of affairs cannot be viewed as being in progress.
*I am liking your system.
* He was knowing English.
When verbs that are ordinarily stative occur in the progressive, they adopt
dynamic meanings. They may indicate a type of behaviour with limited duration:
Your are being obstinate.
Verbs expressing emotion or attitude, which are generally stative, indicate
tentativeness when they occur in the progressive:
Im hoping to take my exam soon.
I was wondering whether you could help me.
(b) The event progressive is used with dynamic verb senses to refer to an event that
has duration and is not completed.
(1) I was reading an economics book last night.
(2) One of the boys was drowning, but I dived in and saved him.
The progressive in (1) suggests that the book was perhaps not finished. In contrast
the simple past in (3) indicates that I had finished reading the book.
(3) I read an economics book.
The simple past drowned could not replace the past progressive was drowning in
(2) because it would not be compatible with the report that the boy was saved.
The present progressive is more commonly used that the simple present for events
in present time because present events are usually regarded as having some
duration.
What are you doing? Im writing a letter.
(c) The habitual progressive is used with dynamic verb senses to refer to events that
repeatedly occur with the implication that they take place over a limited period of
time:
Shes writing some short stories.
Hes teaching in a comprehensive school.
Contrast:
She writes some short stories.
Stance verbs may be used with either the progressive or the non-progressive, often with
little to choose between the variants. But sometimes they seem to be used with the nonprogressive to express a permanent state and with the progressive to express a temporary
state:
James lives in London. [permanent residence]
James is living in London [temporary residence]
DYNAMIC DURATIVE
1 Activities performed by inanimate forces: (wind) blow, (engine) run, rain, snow,
(watch) work.
2 Activities performed by animate agents: dance, eat, play, sing, work.
3 Process (denoting change of state taking place over a period): change, deteriorate,
grow, ripen, widen
4 Accomplishments (action or activity that has a goal or endpoint): finish (the book), knit
(a sweater), read (the paper), write (an essay).
DYNAMIC PUNCTUAL
1 Momentary events or acts: bang, jump, knock, nod, tap. In the progressive, they
indicate the repetition of the event:
He was knocking on the door.
2 Transitional events or acts: arrive, die, drown, land, leave, stop.
In the progressive they refer to a period leading up to the change of state.
The train is (now) arriving at platform 4.
The perfect progressive
When the perfect and progressive aspects are combined in the same VP (e.g. has been
reading), the features of meaning associated with each aspect are also combined to refer
to a temporary situation leading up to the present when the perfect auxiliary is present
has or have. The combination conveys the sense of a situation in progress with limited
duration:
Ive been writing a letter to my nephew.
If the perfect progressive sense is combined with accomplishment predications or process
predications, then the VP conveys the possibility of incompleteness:
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Ive been cleaning the windows (>the job may not be finished; contrast: Ive cleaned the
windows)
The weather has been getting warmer (>it may get warmer still)
The present perfect progressive may be used with dynamic verb senses to refer to
a habit up to the present and possibly into the future:
John has been scoring plenty of goals (this season)
Ive been working on the night shift for several weeks.
The perfect progressive may combine with the past tense and with modals:
The fire had been raging for over a week the temporary event leads up to some point in
the past.
By Friday, we will have been living here for 10 years the temporary state is earlier than
a time in the future indicated by Friday.
The combination with the past tense or a modal need not presuppose an earlier time, and
it can therefore be accompanied by an adverbial of time position.
I had been talking with him only last Monday.
I must have been talking with him last Monday.
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Like the present progressive, it is used with certain dynamic, transitional verbs (e.g.
arrive, come, leave) to convey the meaning of plan (usually, official) or programme (i.e.
timetable/schedule).
The plane takes off at 2.30 tonight
5 Will/Shall + progressive
The construction of will/shall with the progressive may indicate a future period of time
within which another situation occurs:
When you reach the end of the bridge, Ill be waiting there to show you the way.
Another use denotes future as a matter of course. It avoids the interpretation of volition,
intention, promise, etc. to which will, shall and be going to are liable. A sentence such as:
Well be flying at 30,000 feet
spoken by the pilot of an aircraft to the passengers implies that 30,000 feet is the normal
and expected altitude for the flight. This implication accounts for the use of the
construction to convey greater tact than the non-progressive with will/shall:
When will you be paying back the money?
6 Be (about) to + infinitive
Be to + infinitive
Be to + infinitive is used to refer to a future arrangement or plan, a future requirement and
intention.
Their daughter is to be married soon.
You are to be back by 10 oclock. (You are required to.)
If hes to succeed in his new profession, he must try harder. (If he intends to. )
Be about to + infinitive simply expresses near future.
The train is about to leave.
Im about to leave your essay.
The negative be not about to (esp. informal) may be paraphrased as have no intention
of.
She is not about to complain.
7 Modals
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