Lesson 4
Lesson 4
ATS2681 – Structure of
English
WEEK 4 (PART 1)
Class 4 - Morphology and Syntax
Functions in syntax
Functions What
within the constituents
clause do
09/08/2021
Functional structure
of sentence
Basic functional division:
Subjects
Notional definitions are again not terribly useful
Subjects
We need solid linguistic criteria which identify subjects
Even if another word order is used, we can still apply the test:
◦ Candles, Lou is making / Is Lou making candles?
◦ In her bedroom, Lou is making candles / Is Lou making candles in her bedroom?
The subject of a clause is almost always a noun phrase (i.e. including single nouns and pronouns)
as in:
2nd person (you) and non-human 3rd person (it) are invariant
— they never change.
09/08/2021
So the basic position of the subject is sentence initially (or more correctly clause initially)
— spot the case of pronoun (She saw him versus He saw her)
class = noun phrase
subject basic position (in basic clauses subjects appear before
the verb)
obligatory (all regular clauses need a subject)
Non-standard subjects
English requires a subject in all normal sentences
Non-standard subjects
Certain types of clause can fill the subject slot:
Non-standard subjects
The following highlighted phrases are prepositional phrases — yet they are subjects:
Optional elements:
(Direct) object
A grammatical relation (like subject) — also usually a noun phrase
◦ Generalises over semantic roles
Tests:
1) The direct object in an active clause can become the subject of a corresponding passive clause
But where the object NP is long, it often seems better after other elements of the predicate
?I polished the brand new coin which I found yesterday furiously / I polished furiously the brand
new coin which I found yesterday
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Passive
To change an active clause to a passive clause:
◦ The original object becomes subject
◦ The auxiliary be is added (it has to be the final auxiliary)
◦ The main verb is in its -ed form
◦ The original subject may appear in a phrase with by as
its head (but it can be omitted)
More examples:
◦ Olivia loves the dog / The dog is loved by Olivia
◦ The researchers carried out the procedure / The
procedure was carried out (by the researchers)
◦ Jo might have been taking a prescribed drug / A
prescribed drug might have been being taken (by Jo)
In sum class = NP
case of pronoun (She saw him versus He saw her)
— spot the passive (where the object becomes the grammatical subject)
object typically follow the verb (but note they can also be fronted)
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Indirect object
Some English verbs can be followed by two NPs
◦ Heather baked Matt a cake
Semantically restricted – only recipients and beneficiaries
◦ Mike sent Bella a letter
Traditionally called indirect object (the indirect object precedes the direct one)
ATS2681 – Structure of
English
WEEK 4 (PART 2)
Class 4 - Morphology and Syntax
Functions in syntax
More
Types of
functions in
transitivity
the clause
09/08/2021
— spot the case of pronoun (She saw him versus He saw her)
class = noun phrase
subject basic position (in basic clauses subjects appear before
the verb)
obligatory (all regular clauses need a subject)
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Subject–operator inversion:
There are exceptions. ——> Are there exceptions?
Case:
There does not show a contrast (but neither do the pronouns you and it). What about the case
of the constituent that follows the verb.
[Who’s coming to the party?] Well, there’s me …
But when they are part of a there clause, even Standard English requires a singular verb:
There is wine and cheese in the fridge.
*There are wine and cheese in the fridge
In short it looks like there [ðə] in this sentence is involved in the assignment of person and number
properties to the verb – not only in non-standard varieties of English.
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Complements
Some clauses have:
◦ An NP following the verb
◦ No corresponding passive clause
Example:
◦ Susan is a teacher / *A teacher is been by Susan
◦ Tom has become a student / *A student has been become by Tom
The NP in such cases is called a (predicative) complement
More on complements
Predicative complements can also be adjectives (adjective phrases):
◦ Gina is clever
◦ Nick became more forgetful than his father
Compared to objects:
complements do not pick out entities which aren't
already mentioned in the clause
In sum class = noun phrase and adjective phrase
— spot the only objects are eligible for passive (*An electrician was
been by Kees)
(predicative) complements occur after a limited set of linking verbs
complement (be, seem, appear etc.)
complements agree in number with the subject (*Kees
was qualified electricians)
Adverbials
So, constituents that may accompany the verbal element include objects and predicative
complements.
Adverbials can also form part of the predicate. We can distinguish them from the other two predicate
elements by a number of properties.
(4) Stacking
Adverbials can OCCUR RECURSIVELY, or that they can be STACKED (though in reality more than four
adverbials would be rare!)
[One Christmas], I went [with my boyfriend] [to his parents’ home] [for a few days].
Sub-types of adverbials
On the basis of both semantic and syntactic criteria it is possible to distinguish four different
sub-types of adverbials: ADJUNCTS, DISJUNCTS, CONJUNCTS and ADVERBIAL COMPLEMENTS
Sub-types of adverbials
One other kind of adverb: conjuncts
◦ Like disjuncts they are very loosely associated with the rest of the sentence and also belong outside the
predicate
◦ But ….
Adverbial complements
The verb to put requires a location in its VP as well as an object:
◦ We put the car [in the garage]/[there]
◦ *We put the car
We can think of this as evidence that the verb (be) requires an adverbial complement
ATS2681 – Structure of
English
WEEK 4 (PART 3)
Class 4 - Morphology and Syntax
09/08/2021
2. Transitive SPredicatorObject (NP V NP) The boy kicked, caught, threw, saw the ball .
3. Di-transitive SPOO (NP V NP NP) Kees passed, gave, offered, brought her the salt.
4. Complex intransitive (also intensive) SPComplement (NP V NP/AjP) That sounds, is, a good idea
(* do not confuse 4 with 2 — the complement refers to the subject)
5. Complex-transitive SPOC (NP V NP NP/AjP) Kees called, found, thought, made, Wim a liar
(* do not confuse 5 with 3 — the complement refers to the direct object)
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We’ll be revisiting
transitivity again
Bye for now!
when we look at
verbs in Week 7.