On Thi Cao Hoc Mon Linguistics PDF
On Thi Cao Hoc Mon Linguistics PDF
On Thi Cao Hoc Mon Linguistics PDF
To Minh Thanh
CHUYEN NGANH
CONTENTS
Content ................................................................................................................................ i
Preface.............................................................................................................................. vii
Outline for revision............................................................................................................ ix
Table of notational symbols ........................................................................................... xii
Section one: WORD CLASSES
18 Structure .......................................................................................................... 99
LI NOI AU
Thc te la khong phai sach ngon ng cua tac gia ngi nc ngoai nao
cung ap ng ung va u noi dung on tap thi tuyen sinh sau ai hoc chuyen
nganh Giang day tieng Anh (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages)
theo quy nh cua Trng ai hoc Khoa hoc Xa hoi va Nhan van, thuoc ai
hoc Quoc gia Thanh pho Ho Ch Minh. Tai lieu nay ra i nham ap ng nhu
cau on tap thi tuyen sinh sau ai hoc cho mon Ng hoc trong chuyen nganh
neu tren.
e giup cac oi tng d thi lam quen va chuan b tot cho ky thi cua
mnh, tai lieu nay (1) bao gom nhng trong iem theo ung qui nh ve noi
dung on tap cua e cng on tap Cu phap cho ky thi tuyen sinh sau ai hoc
chuyen nganh Giang day tieng Anh va (2) c trnh bay thanh bon phan:
Phan 1: Cac t loai (Word Classes)
Phan 2: Cac loai ng, cu va cau (Types of phrases, clauses and
sentences)
Phan 3: Cac moi quan he ng phap (Grammatical relations)
Phan 4: Mot so e thi va ap an a thc te c dung trong cac ky thi gan
ay.
Tai lieu nay cung co the nam trong th muc sach tham khao giup sinh
vien he tai chc va he chnh quy bang 1 va bang 2 cua chuyen nganh Ng
van Anh hoc thanh cong mon Syntax trong chng trnh chnh khoa cua cac
he ao tao ai hoc nay. Ngoai ra, cac hoc vien cao hoc chuyen nganh Giang
day tieng Anh va cac thay co cua khoa Boi dng giao vien tai Trng ai
hoc Khoa hoc Xa hoi va Nhan van, thuoc ai hoc Quoc gia Thanh pho Ho Ch
Minh cung co the tham khao tai lieu nay khi theo hoc mon Linguistics PG
trong chng trnh chnh khoa cua ca hai he ao tao sau ai hoc nay.
Rat mong tai lieu nay se giup cac oi tng d thi t on luyen tot hn du
co ieu kien hay khong the trc tiep theo hoc cac lp luyen thi tai trng.
Thanh pho Ho Ch Minh, ngay 20 thang 1 nam 2005.
To Minh Thanh
vi
vii
YUUUZ
E CNG ON TAP THI TUYEN SINH CAO HOC
Mon C s: LINGUISTICS
(cho chuyen nganh Giang day tieng Anh)
1. Linguistics
(a) Semantics
- The expression of meaning in English at the word and sentence level;
- The relations of different kinds of meaning;
- Meaning shifts or words;
- Use of language in social interaction.
(b) Syntax
- Word classes;
- Grammatical relations;
- Types of phrases, clauses & sentences.
2. Academic Writing
Write an essay of 250 - 300 words on an issue of second language
teaching and learning.
REFERENCES
Fromkin V. et al (1988) An Introduction to Language.
Sydney: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Hurdford, J. R. & Heasley, B. (1984) Semantics. A Course Book.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jordan, R.R. (1990) Academic Writing Course. Collins ELT. A Division of
Harper Collins Publishers.
Kaplan, J.P. (1989) English Grammar. Principles and Facts.
New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc.
viii
ix
SEMANTICS
GUIDELINES FOR REVIEW
ENGLISH SYNTAX
Introduction
xi
NOTATIONAL SYMBOLS
Most of the symbols used in this text follow conventions, but since conventions
vary, the following list indicates the meanings assigned to them here.
iO = indirect object
A = adjective
M = modifier
Adv = (general) adverb
ModN = pre-modifying noun
ART = article
monotrans = monotransitive verb
AP = adjective phrase
monotrans-prep = monotransitive
AdvP = adverb phrase
prepositional verb
C = complement
monotransVAC = monotransitive verbComN = compound noun
adverbial composite
Comp = complementizer
complex = complex transitive verb
N = noun
Conj = conjunction
N = N-bar
Co-P = a coordination of Prepositions
nC = noun complement
Co-PP = a coordinate Prepositional
NP = noun phrase
phrase
NUM = numeral/number
Co-NP = a coordinate noun phrase
opA = optional adverbial adjunct
Co-AP = a coordinate adjective phrase
obA = obligatory adverbial adjunct
DEG = degree adverb
oC = object(ive) complement
DEM = demonstrative
oP = object-predicative
DET = determiner
POST-MOD = post-modifier
dO = direct object
POST-DET = post-determiner
ditrans = ditransitive verb
PRE-MOD = pre-modifier
ditrans-prep = ditransitive
PRE-DET = pre-determiner
prepositional verb
PRO = pronoun
EmACl = embedded adjective clause
PropN = proper noun
EmAdvCl = embedded adverbial clause
Poss = possessive
EXCLAMATORY DET = exclamatory
PossA = possessive adjective
determiner
PossPropN = possessive proper noun
[E] = empty/covert/zero/implicit subject PossCommN = possessive common noun
PossMarker = possessive marker
H = the head
PossNP = possessive noun phrase
headN = the head noun
predC = predicator complement
headPRO = the head pronoun
P = preposition
headPropN = the head proper noun
prep = prepositional verb
headA = the head adjective
prepO = prepositional object
headGer = the head gerund
prepC = complement of a preposition
IC = immediate constituent
PP = prepositional phrase
InfP = infinitive phrase
PartP = participial phrase
intens = intensive verb
Q = quantifier
intrans = intransitive verb
QA = quantifying adjective
intransVAC = intransitive verbRESTRIC = restricter
adverbial composite
S = sentence
xii
S= S-bar
sC = subject(ive) complement
sP = subject-predicative
SubACl = subordinate adjective clause
SubAdvCl = subordinate adverbial clause
VP = verb phrase
Vgrp = verb group
V-Part = verb participle
V-Ger = gerund
= unfilled
= one-way dependence
= two-way dependence
xiii
minor classes
1. House and Harman [1965] also classifies major/open classes according to their
meaning.
According to the meaning they represent, nouns may be divided into several
classes: common or proper, concrete or abstract, collective, individual, mass,
material, etc. [House and Harman, 1965: 22]
When classified as to meaning, adjectives are descriptive or definitive,
some of each class having definite and some indefinite application. [House and
Harman, 1965: 73]
2. Fromkin et al [1988, 214-215] present three types of criteria to define
major/open classes:
- Form: The class of a word may be apparent from its form. Certain
inflectional and derivational morphemes are associated with certain word classes.
- Function: The class of words may be indicated by the way it functions in a
phrase or sentence. For example, in the sentence
He will not score any more runs unless he runs faster.
The first runs is recognized as a noun and the second as a verb because of
their function.
- Meaning: Some words are commonly classified according to their semantic
type, such as abstract nouns (truth, kindness, beauty) and stative verbs (be,
appear, resemble).
Unfortunately meaning is not a reliable guide because there are many words
which belong to more than one word class (kick, love, drink), but those whose
meaning remains essentially the same. Meaning is therefore best regarded as a
secondary criterion, to be used to check the purely grammatical criteria of form
and function.
3. Kaplan [1989:108] points out that one problem with the traditional definition
of noun and verb since it is meaning-based (a noun is a word that names a person,
place, or thing; a verb is a word that names an action or state), it ought to be
universal valid in all languages, that is. But concepts that are encoded
linguistically as nouns in one language may be encoded as verbs or adjectives in
others. In English, for example, we normally say Im hungry, using an adjective to
describe how we feel; but in Spanish one says tengo hambre literally, I have
hunger, using a noun, hambre, to describe the same feeling.
3
2.2.1.3 Adjectives
Adjectives are identified as adjectives by two aspects of form, their
inflectional morphemes, and their derivational morphemes.
2.2.1.3.1 The two adjective inflectional suffixes in English are:
c The adjective comparative morpheme {er1}:
smaller, saf(e)er, thinner, etc.
d The adjective superlative morpheme {est1}:
smallest, saf(e)est, thinnest, etc.
2.2.1.3.2 Adjectives are identified not only by inflectional
morphemes but also by adjective-forming derivational suffixes3 added
to nouns or verbs: athlete athletic, child childish, collect collective,
read readable, etc.
In short, a word which is inflected with er and est and which is
capable of forming adverbs with ly and/or nouns with ness is called an
adjective. [Stageberg, 1965: 202]
Or, an adjective will be any word which has one or more of the
following positive attributes:
i. it can occur between Article and Noun.
ii. it can occur in the slot (Art) N is _____.
iii. it can occur before (or contains) er and est, or after more and most.
and in addition has all of the following negative attributes.
i. it cannot occur with a plural.
ii. it cannot occur with a possessive.
iii. it cannot occur in the slot (Art) N _____Verb. [Kaplan, 1989: 116]
3
There is a group of about seventy-five, mostly of two syllables, which begin with
the prefix a-: afoot, aground, awake, agape, aloud, afresh, alert, adroit, etc.
These are uninflected words (UWs) because they take no inflectional endings.
Although they do have the prefix a- in common, it seems unwise to label them
formally as either adjectives or adverbs since positionally they appear in both
adjectival and adverbial slots. [Stageberg, 1965: 206]
5
2.2.1.3.4 Adverbs
2.2.1.3.4.1 The two adverb inflectional suffixes in English are:
c The adverb comparative morpheme {er1}: faster, harder, etc.
d The adverb superlative morpheme {est 1}: fastest, hardest, etc.
2.2.1.3.4.2 Adverbs are identified not only by inflectional
morphemes but also by the adverb-forming derivational suffix {ly1}4
added to adjectives: just justly, beautiful beautifully, etc.
2.2.2 English positional classes
According to Stageberg [1965: 196-219], the four positional classes
in English are the nominal, the verbal, the adjectival and the adverbial.
2.2.2.1 Any word, whatever its form-class (noun, verb,
comparable, pronoun, uninflected word) will be tabbed a nominal if it
occupies one of the seven noun positions [Stageberg,1965:196] listed below:
1. The position of the subject:
- Upstairs IS the safest hiding place.
4
In the word-stock of English there are many uninflected words often employed
in the adverbial positions:
1. Uninflected words used both as adverbials and prepositions: above, about,
after, around, before, behind, below, down, in, inside, on, out, outside, since, to,
under, up.
2. -ward series, with optional s: afterward, backward, downward, forward,
homeward, inward, northward, outward, upward, windward.
3. Here series: here, herein, hereby, heretofore, hereafter.
4. There series: there, therein, thereby, theretofore, thereafter.
5. -where series: anywhere, everywhere, somewhere, nowhere.
6. -ways series: crossways, sideways; also, anyway.
7. -time series: meantime, sometime, anytime, sometimes.
8. Miscellaneous: today, tonight, tomorrow, yesterday, now, then, seldom, still,
yet, already, meanwhile, also, too, never, not, forth, thus, sidelong, headlong, maybe,
perhaps, instead, indeed, henceforth, piecemeal, nevertheless, downstairs, indoors,
outdoors, offhand, overseas, unawares, besides, furthermore, always. [Stageberg,
1965:215]
6
placed:
c After THE LEXICAL VERB, especially after AN INTRANSITIVE ONE.
(2)m. He LIVES independently/in the fast lane.
n. He DIED last night.
o. He DROVE recklessly/with abandon.
d After all obligatory elements, i.e. the indirect object, the direct object,
the subjective complement, or the objective complement, of THE LEXICAL
VERB (though it may not be the last element if there are other final
adverbials in the same clause):
(3)a. Tom WAS a doctor for many years.
b. Tom WILL PLAY football tomorrow.
c. Tom SENT a telegraph to his wife yesterday morning.
d. Tom PUT his watch where he can find it in the dark.
e. Tom BELIEVED the man crazy after questioning him.
9
called auxiliaries, which includes English helping verbs (be, have, do)
and the modals (can, could, may, might, will, would, shall, should, must).
However, these authors only identify one subtype of Jacksons
determinrers namely articles as a minor/closed class, completely
ignoring the other subtypes such as possessives, demonstratives, and
quantifiers.
And Stageberg [1965] says nothing concerning minor/closed classes.
2.4 Word-class exercises:
2.4.1 Exercises for form classes
EXERCISE 1: Review the derivational adverb-forming suffix {-ly1} and
the derivational adjective-forming suffix {-ly2}. Then place
a check after each word that qualifies as an adverb.
1. swiftly
2. homely
3. softly
4. costly
5. deftly
10
{-ly2}
6. richly
7. neatly
8. yearly
9. beastly
10. sourly
{-ly1}
{-ly1}
{-ly2}
{-ing3}
{-ing1}
11
12
EXERCISE 6: The adverbial word groups are italicized. In the blank, give their
nominal
adjectival
adverbial
14
_________________
DEG
very
AP
headA
enthusiastic
Adv
beautifully
headA
cool
very
AdvP
headAdv
Adv
headAdv
enthusiastically understandably
badly
_________________
WILL WORRY
too
PREDICATIVE ADJECTIVES
(2)a. The main reason IS his laziness. (3)a. *The reason IS main.
b. HeS a mere youth.
b. *This youth IS mere.
c. *He IS a faint patient.
c. He FEELS faint.
d. *This IS an asleep boy.
d. The boy IS asleep.
17
ATTRIBUTIVE ADJECTIVES
(4)a. The charming girl ATTRACTS his attention. (4)b. The girl IS charming.
(5)a. SheS a lonely wife.
(5)b. I sometimes FEEL lonely.
_________________
NP2
N1
DET
N2
AP1
ART
Relative Clause
AP2
N3
ModN
headN
In the noun phrase marked (1), shirt constitutes the head; the, blue
and cotton belong to the pre-modification; and that I borrowed from my
brother is the post-modification.
The word blue is called a modifier because it describes the shirt: it
limits by excluding other colours and it adds to the plain meaning of shirt.
A modifier may sometimes be separated from the head by intervening
words, like the relative clause in the following NP:
(2) a butterfly in the garden which WAS FLUTTERING among the flowers.
When there is nothing else in the noun phrase, nouns or pronouns are
also complete noun phrases, like cabbages and Aiken in the two following
sentences which are marked (3)a-b:
(3)a. The truck WAS LOADED with cabbages.
b. They FLEW down to Aiken, South Carolina.
18
6.2 The one constituent that a VERB PHRASE (VP, for short) must contain is
the VERB GROUP (Vgrp, for short) [Burton-Roberts, 1997: 78]. The Vgrp, in
its turn, contains one lexical verb and may have up to four auxiliary
verbs, besides the negative word not:
may not have been being interrogated. [Jackson, 1980: 18]
The verb phrase in English consists of a Vgrp and all the words and
word groups which belong with the Vgrp and cluster around it. The Vgrp
itself is called the head, and the other words and word groups are the
modifiers and/or the complements of the head.
The modifier is the generic term for all the adverbial adjuncts that
The complement is the generic term for all the completers of the
verb [Stageberg, 1965: 165], which are usually known as the direct
object, the indirect object, the subjective complement, the objective
complement, and also the predicator complement [Downing and Locke,
1992: 55-56].
had lost is the Vgrp. The relation between the Vgrp (had lost) and the NP
(his leather wallet) is one of complementation: there is a two-way
dependency between the Vgrp (as head) and the NP (as complement).
The use of had lost without a following NP is ungrammatical, and so is the
use of the NP without had lost.
Some verbs require an adverbial without which the proposition is in
complete. [Biber et al, 1999: 143] The adverbial adjunct of place in (5)a
is not optional but obligatory. In other words, the relation between the Vgrp
(was lying) and the adverbial adjunct (on his back) is one of
complementation: there is a two-way dependency between the Vgrp (as
head) and the adverbial adjunct (as complement). The use of was lying
without any adverbial adjunct of place is ungrammatical.
(5)a. The baby WAS LYING on his back.
b. *The baby WAS LYING.
In the VP had lost his leather wallet beside a stream, had lost
is the Vgrp, his leather wallet is the complement and beside a stream
is the modifier of the Vgrp.
S
NP
VP1
Vgrp
[transitive]
(6) Phil
adverb phrase
[optional Adjunct of Location]
VP2
PropN
HAD LOST
NP
[direct object]
PP
is needed, one higher than noun and lower than noun phrase. We will
show it here as N, and call it the N-bar.
NP
N
DET
AP
the
lonely
man
_________________
NP1
PRE-DET
NP2
DET
DET
ART
headN
PossA
all the
(1)a.
men
NP1
NP2
PRE-DET
N1
NP2
N1
DET
AP
N2
headN
PossPropN
AP
N2
headN
8.1.2 There are determiners that are not preceded by predeterminers [Stageberg, 1965: 239]. Some of these determiners are
21
called QUANTIFIERS (Q, for short): some, any, no, each, enough, either,
neither and another, the others are often known as interrogative or
exclamatory determiners: what (a/an)1, which2 and whose3.
NP
NP
DET
headN
DET
NP
DET
EXCLAM. DET
headN
view
what /w4t/ (det.) = the thing(s) which, the person or people who:
What money I have will be yours when I die.
I spent what little time with my family.
What family and friends I still have live a broad.
what /w4t/ (exclamatory det., used in making exclamations):
What awful weather were having!
What beautiful flowers! What a (lovely) view!
what /w4t/ (interrogative det., used to ask sb to specify one or more things, places, people,
etc. from an indefinite number):
Guess what famous writer said this.
I asked her what experience she has had.
What books have you got to read on the subjects?
What woman are you thinking of?
2
which /w1t/ (interrogative determiner, used to ask sb to specify one or more things,
places, people, etc. from a limited number):
Which way is quicker by bus or by train?
Ask him which platform the London train leaves from.
which /w1t/ (interrogative pronoun) = which person or thing:
Which is your favourite subject?
Here are the recently published books. Tell me which are worth reading.
The twins are so much alike that I cant tell which is which.
22
NP1
NP
N
DET
PossA/PossPropN
N1
DET
PossNP
headN
NP2
DET
ART
headN1
PossMarker
N2
headN2
(3)b. the
book
s
cover
8.1.4 The determiner position may be UNFILLED (, for short). Although
the noun phrases marked (4)a-b contain just one word, they should still be
analyzed as having a DET + N structure:
NP
DET
NP
N
DET
HeadN
(4)a.
essays
(a plural countable noun)
N
headN
(4)b.
smoke
(an uncountable noun)
23
DET
Q/DEM/ART
NP
N1
DET
AP
N2
QA
headN
N2
AP
DEG
(5)b.
b.
b.
b.
SO
TOO
VERY
VERY
QA
headN
few
ideas
much garlic
many books
little tact
DET
AP
QA
(6)a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
a small amount of
considerable numbers of
a great/good deal of
one-third of
three-fifths of
N2
headN
people
war victims
money/trouble
time
students
NP
N1
DET
N2
AP
DEG
(7)a.
VERY
QA
N1
DET
headN
many mistakes
ART
AP
N2
NUM
headN
mistake
score [C., pl. unchanged] set or group of twenty: a score of people, three score and ten
25
NP
NP
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP1
NUM1
[ordinal]
ART
first three
AP2
N3
NUM2
[ordinal]
headN
NUM1
[cardinal]
headN
students
N2
AP1
N3
AP2
NUM2
[cardinal]
(8)a. the
N1
DET
(8)b. the
two
first
prizes
DET
ART
NP
N2
AP1
NUM1
[ordinal]
DEM
N3
AP2
NUM2
[cardinal]
N1
DET
AP3
headN1
ModComN
A
headN2
AP1
NUM
AP2
[cardinal]
A
N2
N3
headComN
26
NP
NP
N1
DET
Q
N2
AP1
A1
DEM
NUM
N4
AP3
V-part
N4
headN
N1
DET
EXCLAMATORY DET
(10)b.
AP3
A
NP2
WHAT A
headA
headN
NP1
N3
AP2
DEG
PRE-DET
N2
AP1
N3
AP2
A2
N1
DET
N1
DET
AP
N2
headN
lovely
NP2
view
N2
AP
Adv
(10)d.
headA
headN
27
NP
NP
N1
DET
Q
N1
DET
AP
N2
ComN
ModN
PossPropN
AP
N2
NUM
ComN
headN
ModN
headN
(11)a. some expensive roof maintenance (11)b. Georges two wool neckties
8.5.2 It is not unusual for more than one modifying noun to occur in a
noun phrase. A complication arises from the fact that noun modifiers can
themselves be modified. [Burton-Roberts, 1997: 163]
NP
NP
DET
ART
headComN1
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP
ModNP
ModN1
headComN2
N3
DET
headComN2
headComN1
ModN2
headN
ModN1
headN1
ModN2
headN2
(12)a. the child safety harness (12)b. the child poverty action group
8.5.3 The modifying noun does not accept post-modification [BurtonRoberts, 1997: 164]. Thus the NP marked (13) is grammatically incorrect:
(13) *some [Japanese print after Kunisada] collectors
NP
N1
DET
ART
NP
N2
AP1
N3
AP2
N3
PossCommN
headN
headN
N2
ART AP1
AP
PossCommN
N1
DET
roses
Note that (14)a-b both mean the roses which are red and which bloom
in summer. Similarly, (15)a means the garden roses which bloom in summer
while (15)b means the garden roses which are red and which bloom in
summer.
NP
N1
DET
ART
NP
N1
DET
N2
AP
ART
N2
AP1
N3
AP2
PossCommN
headComN
ModN
PossCommN
headN
headComN
ModN
headN
(15)a. the summers garden roses (15)b. the summers red garden roses
8.7 VERB PARTICIPLES (V-Part, for short): The active present participle
and the passive past participle may appear as pre-modifiers within the
N-bar.
NP
N1
DET
DEM
NP
AP
V-Part
N1
DET
N2
headN
ART
N2
AP
DEG
headA
headN
a broken heart
sliced cake
photocopied materials
these departed guests
8.8 GERUNDS (V-Ger, for short) may also appear as pre-modifiers within
the N bar, but they should be carefully distinguished from active present
participles:
ACTIVE PRESENT PARTICIPLES
living organisms
the sleeping guard
a drinking horse
GERUNDS
living rooms
the sleeping car
drinking water
DET
ART
NP
AP
V-Part
(17)a. the
5
sleeping
DET
N2
ART
headN
ComN
V-Ger
sleeping
headN
car
Note that:
c Certain true adjectives look very much like verb participles: tiring, tired,
(un)interesting, (un)interested, bored, boring, devoted, relieved, unexpected,
surprising, charming, demanding, pleasing, etc. However, since they are gradable (i.e.
they can be modified by degree adverbs) they are easily distinguished from verb
participles: rather pleasing, very interesting, quite unexpected, extremely devoted, etc.
d Since the present and past participles are verbal rather than adjectival,
they are not gradable: *the very leering manager, *a slightly forgotten valley,
*rather sliced cake, etc. They may, however, be modified by general adverbs: in
the rapidly congealing gravy, rapidly modifies congealing resulting in rapidly
congealing, which is an AP.
30
NP1
RESTRIC
NP2
DET
NP2
DET
headN
NP1
RESTRIC
NP2
N
DET
headN
headN
candy
NP1
RESTRIC
NP2
PRE-DET
DET
NP2
N1
DET
NP3
N
PossA headN
PossA
AP
V-Part
N2
headN
(19)a. especially all our guests (19)b. particularly her spotted kitten
_________________
6
7
Quite a few or quite a lot (of) both means a considerable number or amount (of).
Quite some or quite a is used to indicate that a person or thing is unusual.
31
NP1
NP2
AP
NP2
DET1
N1
DET1
PP
N1
AP
PP
ART1 headN1 P
ART1
headN1
NP3
NP3
DET2
N2
ART2 headN2
DET2
N2
ART2
ComN
ModN headN2
Accepting this way of analysis, I strongly believe that the PP postmodifier in the two NPs marked (1)a-b can easily be omitted without
interfering with the rest of the NPs, which is in fact a well-formed NP by
itself: an expedition or the man.
9.1.2 When a given NP includes both a pre-modifying AP and a postmodifying PP, the pre-modifying AP belongs to the N-bar of the given NP
but the post-modifying PP does not:
32
NP1
NP1
AP1
NP2
N1
DET
PP
N2
ART AP2
A
N1
DET
NP3
PP
N2
PossPropN AP2
PropN
headN
AP1
NP2
NP3
headN
(3)
NP1
AP
NP2
DET
N1
ART
headN
PP
P
AP
NP2
NP3
DET
N1
ART
headN
Adv
33
NP
NP1
N1
DET
ART
NP2
AP
AP
N2
DET
headN
ART
headN
(5)a. the
b. the
c. the
members present
men
responsible
stars
visible
NP1
AP
NP2
DET
headA
ART
headN
AP
NP2
AdvP
DET
ART
headN
headA
AdvP
(6)a. the chef responsible for the sauces (6)b. a tree safe to climb up
9.2.3 There is another circumstance when the post-modifying AP itself
contains material preceding the headA, as in (7)a-b:
NP1
AP
NP2
DET
N1
ART
headN
Adv
headA
NP2
DET
ART
headN
DEG
woman more
headA
lovely
NP2
ART
DET
headN
(8)a. the mailman, tired and wet, [trudged along in the rain]
b. a woman,
old and gaunt, [stood at the door]
9.3 PARTICIPIAL PHRASES (PartP, for short):
Participial phrases can be subdivided into two sub-categories:
participial phrases with ing as in (9)a-b and participial phrases with
ed as in (9)c-d:
NP1
AP
NP2
DET
ART headN
NP1
PartP
V-part
AdvP
AP
NP2
DET
ART headN
PartP
V-part
AdvP
PP
InfP
the car coming down the road the man expected to arrive at any moment
(9)a.
(9)b.
9.4 INFINITIVE PHRASES (InfP, for short):
An Infinitive phrase can play the role of an adjective, post-modifying
an NP.
NP1
NP2
DET
ART headN
NP1
AP
InfP
AP
NP2
DET
InfP
ART headN
(10)a. the man to answer this question (10)b. a scheme to win Kathys heart
35
(6)a. the
(6)b. a
(7)a. the
SubACl [POST-M]
N
headN
chef
tree
mailman,
(9)a. the
car
(9)b. the
man
(10)a. the
man
One striking fact about these different kinds of phrasal/clausal postmodification emerging from our discussions is the degree of explicitness
associated with each of them. As one passes from relative clauses to
prepositional phrases, so one finds a gradation from most to least explicit;
cf the cow which is standing in the meadow, the cow standing in the
meadow, the cow in the meadow. [Jackson, 1980: 16]
_________________
clause (or phrase) normally specifies the content of its head noun. [Jacobs,
1995: 100]
NP1
AP [nC]
NP2
N
DET
ART
PP
headN
(1)a. her
b. the
c. the
belief
rumour
news
in God
of an impending merger
of where she is staying
NP1
EmACl [nC]
NP2
DET
ART
headN
(2)a. this
b. the
c. the
news
SubACl [POST-M]
DET
ART
headN
(6)a. the
chef
b. a
tree
c. the mailman,
d. the mailman,
e. the
car
f. the
man
g. the
man
h. the
man
38
NP
PropN
(1)a. Ed
b. Tom
c. Oscar
VP
Vgrp
[intens]
IS
WAS
SHOULD BE
AP/NP/PP [sP/sC]
AP
NP
NP
Finite clause
Non-finite clause
NP
AdvP
PP
Finite clause
complement (oC, for short) are in italic while the dOs are underlined in the
following examples:
S
NP
VP
Vgrp
[complex]
NP[dO]
AP/NP/PP/non-finite Cl [oP/oC]
(non-finite cl)
AP
Indefinite NP
PP
what it
IS
today.
as + NP
PP
Non-finite clause
ing
He KEPT us [E] waiting.
as + ing I REGARD that as [E] asking for the impossible.
ed
She LEFT me [E] stunned.
copular verb. [Jacobs, 1995: 59] That is the reason why the second NP in
(3)a-b is called an Object-Predicative or an Object(ive) Complement:
(3)a. We DECLARE Frank Wilson the winner.
(cf. Frank Wilson IS the winner.)
b. The club ELECTED Mr. Jones membership secretary.
(cf. Mr. Jones WAS the membership secretary of the club.)
This explains why it is often possible to insert to be or as in front of the NP
or AP constituent being the attributive or identifying object(tive) complement:
(4)a. The court CONSIDERED Smith to be a trustworthy witness.
b. The club WONT APPOINT a teenager as the committee treasurer.
c. The extra money HELPED John to be independent.
d. We REGARD your action as criminal.
11.2.4 Many complex transitive verbs can be made passive. The direct
object of an active verb became the subject of the same verb in the passive:
S
NP
VP1
VP2
Vgrp
[complex]
[oP/oC]
PP
[opA of Agent]
(2)a. The lesson WAS MADE extremely interesting (by the teacher).
IS BEING MADE Beths spokesperson.
b. Stella
c. He WAS REGARDED as the only possible candidate (by party members).
d. The traffic WAS GOT
moving
(by the policeman).
e. The place HAS BEEN DECLARED to be free from infection
(by an official).
NP
Pro
VP
Vgrp NP[iO]
[ditrans]
NP
NP [dO]
Pro
VP
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP[dO]
PP[iO]
cut
fetch find
reserve save spare
write
do not fulfil the second criterion for Indirect Objects, that of substitution
by a phrase with to or for as in (6)a-b. We will therefore call them Direct
Objects:
(6)a. WeLL ALLOW everybody a ten minute break.
b. The shop assistant CHARGED me too much for the toothpaste.
(6)c. Everybody WILL BE ALLOWED a ten minute break.
d. I WAS CHARGED too much for the toothpaste.
(6)e.*We WILL ALLOW a ten minute break to everybody.
f.*The shop assistant CHARGED too much to me for the toothpaste.
Neither the word group in bold in (6)a-b are Indirect Objects
because they cannot become Subject in a passive clause and there is no
prepositional alternative to the Object. [Downing and Lock, 1992: 89]
(6)g. *A ten minute break WILL BE ALLOWED to everybody.
h. *Too much WAS CHARGED to me for the toothpaste.
(6)i. *We WILL ALLOW everybody to a ten minute break.
j. *The shop assistant CHARGED me to too much for the toothpaste.
Downing and Locke [1992: 55-56, 88-92] call these obligatory
constituents that are not classed as Objects Predicator Complements
(predC, for short). Below are the verbs which take a Direct Object followed
by a Predicator Complement: allow, ask, bet, charge, cost, deny,
forgive, grudge, wish, refuse and empty uses of give. It is clear that
these verbs are not passivised. A few more examples are given below for
further consolidation:
S
NP
VP
Vgrp
[ditrans]
(7)a. He
b. He
46
WISHED
GAVE
NP[dO]
NP[predC]
me
the door
a happy day.
a push.
c. [Let]s
ASK
someone the way.
d. The bank
HAS REFUSED
me
a loan.
e. They
GRUDGED
him
his pocket money.
(7)a. *He WISHED a happy day to me.
b. *He GAVE a push to the door.
c. *Lets ASK the way to someone.
d. *The bank HAS REFUSED a loan to me.
e. *They GRUDGED his pocket money to him.
(7)a. *A happy day WAS WISHED to me.
b. *A push WAS GIVEN to the door.
c. * The way IS ASKED to someone.
d. *A loan HAS BEEN REFUSED to me.
e. *His pocket money WAS GRUDGED to him.
11.4 MONOTRANSITIVE (monotrans, for short) verbs/verb phrases
11.4.1 A monotransitive verb requires a single Noun Phrase to
complement it The NP that complements a transitive verb is said to
function as its DIRECT OBJECT (dO, for short) Since the Vgrp and the NP are
in functional relationship, the NP needs to be represented as a sister of the
Vgrp (and therefore as a daughter of the VP). [Burton-Roberts, 1997: 82]
S
NP
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO]
S
NP
VP
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
AdvP
[opA of Agent]
PP
by the police.
(by me).
(by the frost).
However, the removal of over the fence and along the road from
(9)a-b is impossible because these PPs are two obligatory adverbial
adjuncts of Path:
(9)a. *He JUMPED the horse.
b. *The sergeant MARCHED the soldiers.
48
The same result will be found out with (9)c-d, (9)e-g and (9)h when
they respectively lose their obligatory adverbial adjunct of Terminus,
Location or Direction:
(9)c. *ILL WALK you.
d. *You COULD BRING it.
e. *I always GET off /LEAVE the bus.
f. *Liza HAS BEEN PUTTING the liquor.
g. *She PLACED the baby.
h. *He [PUT his arms around me and] WALKED me.
As an obligatory adverbial adjunct of Terminus in (11)a, home
can neither be moved out of its fixed position at the end of this English
sentence, i.e. after the direct object you of the monotransitive verb
WALK. Thats why (11)b-c are not grammatically correct:
(11)a. ILL WALK you home.
b. *I home WILL WALK you.
c. *ILL home WALK you.
As an optional adverbial adjunct of Time in (12)a-c, soon is free to
move to other typically adverbial positions within a sentence:
c at the end of the sentence, i.e. after the complement (the direct
object, the indirect object, the subjective complement, or the objective
complement) of the lexical verb;
d after the NP subject; and
e after the auxiliary verb or the first auxiliary verb:
(12)a. ILL SEE you soon.
b. I soon WILL SEE you.
c. ILL soon SEE you.
The above illustrations prove that although it is not always easy to
distinguish obligatory adverbial adjuncts from optional adverbial adjuncts,
this can successfully be done with some care.
11.4.4 Certain verbs take an obligatory complement but do not
passivise or, if they do, the same relationship is not maintained. [Downing
and Locke, 1992: 55-56] This obligatory complement is called PREDICATOR
COMPLEMENT (predC, for short), which does not fulfill the criteria used to
define the two types of objects (i.e. the direct object and the
49
50
IS FANCIED.
Note that:
c The sentences beginning with a star (*) are all grammatically incorrect.
d The reason for non-passivisation in examples such as these is that the
relationships expressed by these verbs are by nature not extensive. Verbs of
possession and non-possession (lack), of suitability, resemblance and
measure are essentially processes of being. And the semantic structure
shows that the nominals which follow them cannot be considered as
Direct Objects. [Downing and Locke, 1992: 56]
11.5 PREPOSITIONAL (prep, for short) verbs/verb phrases
Glance, reply, refer, and look are examples of PREPOSITIONAL
VERBSthey must be complemented by a Prepositional Phrase [BurtonRoberts, 1997: 90]. The PP that complements a prepositional Vgrp is called
A PREPOSITIONAL OBJECT (prepO, for short). Take glance, for example:
(14)a. *Max GLANCED.
b. *Max GLANCED the falling acrobat.
11.5.1 MONOTRANSITIVE PREPOSITIONAL (monotrans-prep, for
short) verbs/verb phrases
11.5.1.1 Prepositional verbs are counted as monotransitive (i.e.
what follows the verb is a Prepositional Object) if (a) their cohesion is such
that without the preposition the verb is either meaningless (e.g. account
51
for) or has a different meaning (e.g. allow, allow for); and (b) if the verb
can passivise with the completive of the preposition at Subject (The
loss cant be accounted for). In addition, such verbs can typically answer a
question beginning with what or wh(om) (What/Who must I see to?). A
short list of some common verbs of this kind is given below. Many verbs,
such as think or hear, admit more than one preposition with a slight
difference of meaning:
account
bank
admit
talk
aim
call
consent
about
allow
for
on
to
think
hope
count
keep
long
rely
resort
think
hear
dispose
believe
of
get
in
break
deal
at
reckon
with
hint
reason
[Downing and Locke, 1992: 75-76]
S
NP
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans-prep]
PP[prepO]
(15)a. Max
GLANCED
b. He
WOULD never RESORT
c. You
ARE HINTING
d. I
DONT BELIEVE
e. Linda
IS THINKING
f. She
HAS DISPOSED
g. You
CANT RELY
h. The minister REFERED
i. The organizers HADNT RECKONED
j. The manager IS DEALING
52
11.5.1.2 Some of the verbs in this case can be made passive. The
noun or noun phrase following the preposition in the active pattern becomes
the subject of the passive one:
S
NP
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans-prep]
verbs/verb phrases
VP
Vgrp
[ditrans-prep]
NP[dO]
PP [prepO]
(16)a. They
BLAMED
the fire
on the gardener.
b. They
BLAMED
the gardener for fire.
c. That firm
SUPPLIES
the university with paper.
d. He
CONVINCED
the jury
of his innocence.
e. The government SHOULD INFORM the public of the consequences.
f. I
WILL INTRODUCE you
to my friends.
g. I
CONGRATULATED Janet
on her success.
53
h. It
REMINDS
me
of Italy.
i. They
ROBBED
her
of her watch and jewels.
11.5.2.2 The subject and the direct object of the verb may refer to
the same person, in which case a reflexive pronoun is used.
(16)k. Why DONT you HELP yourself to wine?
l. He CONVINCED himself of the rightness of his actions.
11.5.2.3 Note that c both the NP direct object and the PP
prepositional object are obligatory in this case and that d the ditransitive
prepositional verb is frequently used in the passive, with the dO constituent
becoming the subject in the passive clause:
S
NP
VP
PP [prepO]
Vgrp
[ditrans-prep]
for
from
of
to
with
on
in
confine
charge blame
interest
help
compare compliment
introduce supply
congratulate
refer
sentence
treat
NP
VP
NP
VP
Vgrp
[intrans]
Vgrp
[intrans]
(17)a. Phil
SUNBATHED. (17)i. We
RE GOING TO EAT out.
b. The ball
ROLLED.
j. Phil
HAS SHOWN off.
c. The door
WONT OPEN.
k. My children HAVE GROWN up.
d. Lightning
FLASHED.
l. That old man DOES CARRY on.
e. The Bengal tiger DIED.
m. Her father PASSED away.
f. Nobody
APPEARED.
n. Nobody
TURNED up.
g. A tourist
COLLAPSED.
o. A tourist
FELL down.
h. One of the tires EXPLODED.
p. One of the tires BLEW out.
11.6.2 An intransitive verb is frequently modified by one or more
optional adverbial adjuncts (opA, for short). Adjuncts provide circumstantial
information about the action, process or event talked about in the clause in
which they occur. Circumstantial information includes information about the
place, time, manner, etc. of the action, process or event. [Jackson, 1980: 25]
They commonly are in form of adverbs or adverb phrases, prepositional
phrases, infinitive phrases, participial phrases and subordinate
clauses.
S
NP
PropN
NP
VP1
VP2
Vgrp
[intrans]
AdvP
[opA of Location]
PP
VP1
AdvP
VP2
[opA of Manner]
Vgrp
Adv
[intrans]
55
11.6.3 Adverbial adjuncts are usually CIRCUMSTANTS or NONINHERENT ROLES [Halliday, 1970: 150], i.e. they optionally occur in a large
number of VPs; they can be omitted without disturbing the grammaticality of
the whole VPs that include them. However, they are ACTANTS or INHERENT
ROLES, i.e. their occurrence is obligatory in other VPs, when they accompany
a number of verbs:
(i) INTRANSITIVE VERBS of movement , in many cases together the
manner of moving, such as race, creep, slip, slide, flow, steal, walk,
stroll, trudge, run, plunge, swim, fly, sail, ride, etc. typically require an
obligatory adverbial adjunct of Location, Source, Direction, Terminus
or Path [Biber et al, 1999: 143]; [Downing and Locke, 1992: 56]:
(19)a. A veiled moon RODE in the high heavens (Location).
b. A large policeman WAS WALKING round the corner (Path).
c. An old man STROLLED towards the bar (Direction).
d. We STOLE out of the lecture-room (Source).
e. The students RACED across the campus (Path).
f. The boys TRUDGED up the steep path (Direction).
g. The ship SAILED out of the harbor (Source).
h. ILL SLIP into something more comfortable (Terminus).
of position or existence such as stand,
live, hang, stretch, etc. typically require an adverbial adjunct of
Location [Downing and Locke, 1992: 74].
(20)a. The National Theater STANDS near the river (Location).
b. Your rain coat IS HANGING in the hall (Location).
c. Her paintings HANG in the National Gallery (Location).
d. A vast plain STRETCHES below the castle (Location).
e. The book IS still SITTING on my shelf (Location).
f. There EXISTS a king in Sweden (Location).
g. One of the biggest men Id ever seen WAS LYING
on the beach (Location).
h. The baby WAS LYING on his front (Location Manner).
(ii)
56
INTRANSITIVE VERBS
INTRANSITIVE VERBS
58
g PREPOSITIONAL [prep]:
ga. MONOTRANSITIVE PREPOSITIONAL [monotrans-prep]:
SVprepO: Max GLANCED at the falling acrobat.
subject Vgrp prepositional object
S [montrans-prep]
prepO
gb. DITRANSITIVE PREPOSITIONAL [ditrans-prep]:
SVdOprepO:They BLAMED
the fire on the gardener.
of the time.
He REMINDED her
subjectVgrpdirect objectprepositional object
S [ditrans-prep] dO
prepO
h INTRANSITIVE [intrans]:
ha. SV: He TURNED UP (= appeared).
He IS LYING (= is telling lies).
subjectVgrp
[intrans]
S
hb. SVobA: He IS LYING in a hammock.
subject Vgrp obligatory adjunct
S
[intrans] obA of Location
11.8 Troublesome verbs
A verb can belong to various sub-categories, making it rather difficult
to identify its major functions in English sentences. Feel, stretch, erupt, stay,
sound, appear and make are among these troublesome verbs:
(23)a. The trumpet SOUNDED. (sounded = gave out a sound or sounds)
S
Vgrp
[intrans]
b. The doctor SOUNDED the patients chest. (sounded sth = tested sth)
S
Vgrp
dO
[monotrans]
(appeared deserted = seemed (to be) or gave the impression of being deserted)
60
(28)a. The doctor CAN only STAY the progress of this disease.
opA of Manner
S
Vgrp
dO
[monotrans]
(stay = delay, make (sth) slower)
b. They STAYED friends for years. (stayed = remained)
Vgrp sP/sC opA of Extent in Time
S
[intens]
b. I LL MAKE
S Vgrp
[monotrans]
[ditrans]
coordinators as in (1)a-b,
13 Types of clauses
13.1 Finite clauses vs. non-finite clauses
The distinction between finite and non-finite clauses depends on
the form of the verb chosen: If the speaker wishes to express tense,
person or number, a finite form of the verb is chosen, such as eats, locked,
went and the clause is then called a finite clause. [Downing and Locke,
1992: 11]
All of THE FOLLOWING VERB FORMS, which are capitalized, and
therefore the following clauses, are finite:
(1) She BROKE the dish.
(2) He HAS GONE.
(3) It IS unnecessary.
Accordingly, if the verb form does not express this type of information
about the verbal process, the verbs and the clauses are classed as nonfinite. In the following non-finite clauses, THE NON-FINITE VERB FORMS
are capitalized and italicized:
(4)a. For Sandra TO DELAY her graduation IS unnecessary. (to-infinitive)
b. I LET him DO it by himself. (bare infinitive)
c. Mary DOESNT TOLERATE
62
(8) has a specific meaning, one something like the reasons is. Introducers
such as because, although, and since, all of which have quite specific
meanings, are subordinators.
complementizers and subordinators occur. This slot, known as the COMP slot
(after complementizer), turns out to be a very important one. [Jacobs,
1995: 65-66]
Note also that dependent clauses can be either finite as in (7-8) or
non-finite as in (6). Independent clauses can only be finite like (3-5).
13.3 Subordinate clauses vs. embedded clauses
According to Jacobs [1995: 66-69], the following difference between
embedded and subordinate clauses is an important one.
13.3.1 If embedded clauses are omitted from a sentence containing
them, the sentence is usually ungrammatical. This is because embedded
clauses are arguments of a higher predicate, very often the subjects or
objects of their container clauses. Any finite sentence that loses its subject
or object argument becomes ungrammatical. So the embedded clauses
are indispensable for grammaticality. [Jacobs, 1995: 68]
S
NP
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP [dO]
DET
ART
N
headN
(1) That Sharons car HAD BROKEN down ASTONISHED the mechanic.
64
S
NP
DET
ART
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP [dO]
S[embedded finite clause]
headN
COMP
(2) The police REPORTED that Sharons car HAD BROKEN down.
13.3.2 Subordinate clauses, clauses with subordinators in the
COMP slot, differ from embedded clauses in that they are not required
arguments of a predicate. They are thus not used as subjects or objects
[Jacobs, 1995: 65]. Subordinate clauses are adjuncts which can be omitted
without making their sentence ungrammatical. Just as adverbs and prepositional
phrases can be omitted, so can subordinate clauses. [Jacobs, 1995: 68]
(3)a. The family returned to the villa after Sharons car HAD BROKEN down.
(4)a. Pavlova found the children where Sharons car HAD BROKEN down.
(5)a. Lord Aston only used his Rolls Royce if Sharon car BROKE down.
Note that non-finite subordinate clauses often lack an overt
subordinator [Jacobs, 1995: 67].
S
NP
PropN
VP1
AdvP
[optional Adjunct of Purpose]
VP2
S
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO]
Comp
NP
VP
(6) She LOCKED the door so as [E] TO PREVENT any more intrusions.
(7) She LOCKED the door
Also note that the sentences marked (3-5)a are well-formed even without
their subordinate clauses, resulting in (3-5)b:
(3)b. The family RETURNED to the villa.
(4)b. Pavlova FOUND the children.
(5)b. Lord Aston only USED his Rolls Royce.
_________________
Covert subjects are cognitively real, that is, real in the English
speakers consciousness, despite the lack of words standing for them.
[Jacobs, 1995: 72]
Although the non-finite clauses in (2)c-d seem like modifiers of the
noun phrase following them, both their position and their function show that
they are not. They are non-finite subordinate clauses marking a perspective.
Sometimes, a more explicit marking of perspective appears:
After [E] BEING BATTERED by the heavy storm,
the ship LIMPED into Southampton harbour. [Jacobs, 1995: 72]
_________________
relative
clause,
68
NP
VP
(1)a. Tom
DISAPPEARED.
CREPT into a cave.
b. He
IS GOING TO BUY a car.
c. My father
d. The flight to Tokyo TOOK 21 hours.
CAN RELY on Gina.
e. You
HAD GIVEN her a ring.
f. Ed
WILL ALLOW everyone a ten-minute break.
g. We
HAS MADE Susan angry.
h. Albert
IS unhappy.
i. Susan
Each of the above sentences contains a VP. The VP contains a Vgrp.
The Vgrp can consist of a single word (as in disappear, crept, took, and is)
or of more than one word (as in is going to buy, can rely, had given, will
allow, and has made). In English and in many other languages, the central
element in a clause is the verb; each clause and therefore each simple
sentence contains just one verb. [Finegan, 1994: 119]
71
Conj
S1
NP1
VP1
S2
NP2
VP2
(2)a. Karen ASSEMBLED the new grill and Joe COOKED the hot dogs.
b. She
IS rich and famous
but I
DONT FIND her talented.
c. You SHOULD TRY to work hard or you LL GET fired.
d. Roses
ARE red
but violets ARE blue.
Each of the above sentences consists of two clauses joined by a word
such as and, but, or or, which are called coordinating conjunctions, or
simply conjunctions The clauses in a coordinate sentence hold equal status.
Neither clause is part of the other clause, and each could stand by itself as an
independent sentence. [Finegan, 1994: 119]
It is necessary to confirm that in the above examples and, but, or or
does not form a constituent with either of the clauses it conjoins.
Last but not least, co-ordinate constructions are not limited to two items
of equal value:
S5
S1
Conj
S2
Conj
S3
Conj
S4
(2)e. Roses ARE red but violets ARE blue and sugar IS sweet and so ARE you.
17.3. The following are a number of typical examples of complex sentences.
(3)a. If you WASH the sweater, it WILL STRETCH.
b. An aquarium IS a place in which fish IS KEPT.
c. While he WAS SITTING in his chair, he HEARD a noise
72
d. Although I DID NOT WANT to leave my bed, the wind BLEW so strong
clauses, i.e. finite clauses preceded by either the introductory word that or
the subordinate conjunction what, where, when, why, who, how, etc. This
construction is generally used in formal written English [Stanley, 1989: 2]:
S1
NP1
Comp
VP1
S[finite clause]
S2
NP2
VP2
MAY FALL
c. That Einstein
IS
d. That he
FAILED to
in deserts
a great scientist
turn up
IS obvious.
IS true.
IS understandable.
SURPRISED nobody.
73
IS sometimes DISPUTED.
IS unknown.
IS a mystery.
d. Where he GOES
IS no business of yours.
e. Why the library WAS CLOSED for months WAS NOT EXPLAINED.
f. What he SAID
SHOCKED me.
g. When I GO
NP1
S[finite that-clause]
NP
DET
VP1
N Comp
ART headN
S2
NP2
VP2
Where [E] TO LEAVE the dog IS the problem. (Wh + to-inf. clause)
[E] RUN for President
VP1
S [non-finite clause]
[intens]
S2
Comp
NP2
Vgrp
AP/NP[sP/sC]
VP2
Note that [E] is the symbol to stand for the empty/covert/zero/implicit subject in
non-finites clauses.
75
In any clause, elements are frequently of different size and complexity, or weight
There is a preferred distribution of elements in the clause in accordance with the weight
called the principle of end-weight: the tendency for long and complex elements to be
placed towards the end of a clause [Biber et al, 1999: 898]. Compare:
(1) I FOUND the man guilty.
(2) I FOUND guilty the man who has scars on his cheeks.
76
S1
PRO
VP1
NP1
[anticipatory
subject]
Vgrp
[intens]
S[finite clause]
S2
AP/NP[sP/sC] Comp
VP2
NP2
(4)a. It
IS
b. It IS
obvious
true
(5)a. It
IS
unknown
b. It
IS
a mystery
IS CAUSED
how they
MANAGED
IS a pity
(that) you
b. It
IS a bore
when people
immense.
MAY FALL
(6)a. It
c. It
d. It
ARE
in deserts.
by rain or wind.
to survive.
company.
their minds.
Note that the subjective complement of the copular verb be is, quite
often, realised by an NP, as in (6)a-d. Also note that embedded clausal
subjects can be extraposed from various sentence structures, with (S + be +
sP/sC) the most common:
(7)a. [E] TO SEE such poverty MAKES one sad.
a. It MAKES one sad [E] TO SEE such poverty.
(S + complex transV + dO + oP/oC)
b. Where you SIT DOESNT MATTER.
b. It DOESNT MATTER where you SIT . (S+ intranV)
c. (The fact) that the number-plate HAD BEEN CHANGED STRUCK me.
c. It STRUCK me that the number-plate HAD BEEN CHANGED.
(S + monotransV + dO)
d. (The fact) that you ARE LEAVING the company SHOULDNT COME as a surprise.
d. It SHOULDNT COME as a surprise (that) you ARE LEAVING the company.
(S + intensV + sP/sC)
77
Comp
S1
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO/predC]
Comp
S[finite clause]
S2
NP2
VP2
I
DO that?
b. HAVE you DONE
what
I
HAVE TOLD you?
c.
He DID NOT SEE where
I
HAD GONE.
d. They DID NOT REALISE how
we
DO it.
e.
I
DONT KNOW if/whether he
HAS DONE it yet.
f. The class DOESNT KNOW what time it
HAS TO BE in school.
g. Bill DISCOVERD
who
he HAD TO GIVE the money to.
h. The students HAVENT LEARNT which tutor they CAN RELY on.
i. The authorities CLAIM that everything possible HAS BEEN DONE.
j. They
FEAR
that there MAY BE no survivor.
k. Peter
DENIED
that he
HAD LEFT the light on all night.
l. We
REALISED that he
WAS just under great strain.
m. Officials ARGUE
that their public image
IS unfair.
10
78
Also see 6.2, 11.3.5, 11.4 and Downing and Locke [1992: 55-56] for further consideration.
S1
VP1
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO/predC]
S[non-finite clause]
S2
Comp
NP2
DOESNT KNOW
g. Bill DISCOVERD
VP2
what we
OUGHT TO DO
what [E]
TO DO
what we
OUGHT TO DO
what [E]
TO DO
next.
next.
next.
next.
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO/predC]
S[non-finite clause]
S2
Comp
NP2
VP2
(13)a. Bill
LIKES
[E] TO ARRIVE early for meetings.
b. The laboratories FAILED [E] TO PRODUCE useful results.
c. Jane
WANTS
[E] TO FINISH the job by tomorrow.
d. Peter
EXPECTS
[E] TO BE PROMOTED soon.
e. The janitor REFUSED
[E] TO LOCK the door.
(14)a. Peter
ENJOYS
[E] PLAYING football.
b. Fred
STARTED
[E] ARGUING.
c. This airline WILL FINISH
[E] OPERATING next year.
d. I
CANT HELP
[E] THINKING he must be crazy.
e. The laboratories CEASED
[E] PRODUCING useful results.
Note that:
c Many dO/predC embedded clauses occur with either the toinfinitive or the ing form without changing their lexical meaning:
(15)a. Many Londoners PREFER [E] TO TRAVEL/TRAVELLING by train.
b. Mary
HATES
[E] TO DRIVE/DRIVING in the rush hour
c. Tom
LOVES
[E] TO DO/DOING the housework.
d. He DOESNT BOTHER
[E] TO CHANGE/CHANGING the sheets.
80
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO/predC]
Comp
S[non-finite clause]
S2
NP2
VP2
81
(17)a. I
DONT LIKE him/John
INTERUPTING all the time.
him/her
COMING home late.
b. Jill HATES
c. We ANTICIPATED her/Mary(s) TAKING over the business.
d. The employers RESENTED the staff(s)/their BEING CONSULTED.
Note that c the overt subject of the non-finite clause must be an object
personal pronoun (e.g. him, her, and them), a noun phrase (e.g. the staff) or a
possessive (e.g. Marys, their, and her) and that d the verbs in (17)e cannot
normally be made passive while some of the verbs in (16)e can:
(16)e. I EXPECT the parcel TO ARRIVE tomorrow.
e. The parcel IS EXPECTED TO ARRIVE tomorrow.
(17)e. I DISLIKE us/our WORKING late at night.
e. *Our WORKING late at night IS DISLIKED (by us).
Also note that e many dO/predC embedded clauses occur with an
overt subject of their own; otherwise their cover subject is the same as
that of the main clause:
(18) a. The villagers
WANT
a. The villagers
WANT
DONT MIND
b. I
DONT MIND
b. I
c. He
HATES
HATES
c. He
82
S1
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP[dO/predC]
S [non-finite clause]
S2
Comp
NP2
(19)a. We
WATCHED
b. The porter HEARD
c. The children SAW
NOTICED
d. He
e. The rescuersFELT
the men
someone
the cat
a child
John
VP2
DESTROY(ING) the
furniture.
SLAM(MING) the door.
STEAL(ING) the meat.
ENTER(ING) the court.
LOS(ING) his grip of the rope.
Note that:
c The verbs in (19)a-e can be made passive:
(19)b. Someone WAS HEARD SLAMMING/TO SLAM the door (by the porter).
c. The cat WAS SEEN STEALING/TO STEAL the meat (by the children).
d The overt subject of the non-finite clause must be a noun
(e.g. John), a noun phrase (e.g. the cat) or an indefinite pronoun
(e.g. someone).
e The bare infinitive in the rescuers felt John lose his grip of rope
implies that John fully lost his hold of the rope while the rescuers were in
contact with him. The ing form in the rescuers felt John losing his grip of
rope does not imply that.
f Unfortunately, not all the dO finite or non-finite clause of the
active monotransitive verbs in the cases that have been presented so far can
become passive. With many verbs which do not passivise, the predication is
completed by means of a finite or non-finite clause. When this cannot be
replaced by a Nominal Group or by it, we classify it as Predicator
Complement [Downing and Locke [1992: 56], abbreviated as predC.
83
VP1
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP[iO]
NP[dO]
S[finite that-clause]
Comp
BET
S2
VP2
NP2
us
that she
you
IS
WAS TELLING
PERSUADED
f. [E ]
REMIND
me
WAS
HAVE
that I
feasible.
visitors tonight.
the truth.
in no danger.
AM
IS essential.
beautiful.
17.3.1.2.7 Advise, ask, remind, show, teach, and tell are some
common ditransitive verbs which introduce indirect interrogatives. Most of
these can take a dO Wh-finite or non-finite clause after an iO pronoun or
noun phrase. Remind is commonly used with a non-finite.
84
S1
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP[iO]
NP[dO]
S[(non-)finite clause]
S2
Comp
NP2
(21)a. I
b.
LL ASK
TELL
someone
me
REMIND
me
VP2
who(m)
we
who(m)
[E]
TO GIVE
how
CAN SWITCH
how
[E]
what
you
what
[E]
TO DO.
when
[E]
TO SWITCH
where
you
CAN SEND
CAN GIVE
it to.
it to.
it on.
it on.
TO SWITCH
SHOULD DO.
it off.
it.
85
S1
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP[iO]
NP[dO]
S[non-finite clause]
S2
Comp
VP2
NP2
(22)a.
TELL
the children [E] TO KEEP quiet!
URGED
his friend [E] TO GIVE UP drug.
b. He
c. An unexpected clue LED the police [E] TO SUSPECT a kidnap.
d. He
TOLD
us
[E] TO STAY.
e. She LL probably ASK you
[E] TO LEND her some money.
f. I CHALLENGE
you
[E] TO DISPROVE my argument.
g. This law WILL ENABLE elderly people [E] TO CLAIM higher position.
Note that c the indirect object refers to the person or people
addressed by the subject [Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary, 1992:
xxviii] and that d some ditransitive verbs in three following cases can be
made passive, with the indirect object of an active verb becoming the subject
of the passive one. Again, the dO (non-)finite clause can never become
the subject of the passive clause:
(20)i. Colleagues TOLD Paul that the job WOULDNT BE easy.
i. Paul WAS TOLD (by colleagues) that the job WOULDNT BE easy.
i. *That the job WOULDNT BE easy WAS TOLD (Paul by colleagues).
(21)f. The instructor TAUGHT the dancers how they SHOULD BREATHE.
how [E]
TO BREATHE.
how [E]
TO BREATHE.
S1
Vgrp
[ditrans]
VP1
PP[iO]
NP[dO]
S[finite that-clause]
S2
Comp
VP2
NP2
(23)a. He
CONFESSED
to me
b. I
c. He
SIGNALED
to us
WOULD KEEP
quiet.
how [E]
TO HANDLE complaints.
where [E]
TO ASSEMBLE.
87
direct objects:
(23)h. Sir Humphrey EXPLAINED to the Minister that delays MIGHT BE fatal.
h. *The Minister WAS EXPLAINED that delays MIGHT BE fatal.
h. *That delays MIGHT BE fatal WAS EXPLAINED to the Minister.
If a passive is required, some verbs allow an alternative structure with
the semantically empty pronoun it and an extraposed that-clause subject:
(23)h. It WAS EXPLAINED to the Minister that delays MIGHT BE fatal.
Below are two more examples to re-support the passive construction
with it.
(23)g. It WAS EXPLAINED to customers (by the garage)
that the spare parts HAD NOT BEEN DELIVERD.
(23)a. It WAS EXPLAINED to the staff how they SHOULD HANDLE complaints.
how [E]
TO HANDLE complaints.
S1
NP1
PRO
VP1
Vgrp
PRO
AP[oP/oC]
[complex]
[anticipatory dO]
A
NP[dO]
S[(non-)finite clause]
S2
Comp
VP2
NP2
(26)a. I
b. I
FIND
CONSIDERS
it strange that he
REFUSES
to come.
[E]
TO LEAVE
now.
HAVING so
many fans.
89
S1
NP1
PRO
VP1
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP[iO]
NP[dO]
Comp
VP2
NP2
(28)a. I M GIVING
[E]
[E]
90
S1
NP1
VP1
S[(non-)finite clause]
Vgrp
[intens]
Comp
[sP/sC]
S2
VP2
NP2
That
WAS
what I
THOUGHT
b.
She
BECAME
what she
HAD HOPED.
c.
She
HAS BECOME
d.
This
IS
how
you
e. Kens belief
IS
that
IS
for
you TO GO by train.
others DOING the work.
[E] TELL him to go away.
(29)a.
too.
[E]
[E]
SHOULD DO
WITHDRAW.
it.
STANDING in
queues.
91
S1
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
S[finite WH-clause]
NP[dO]
[complex]
Comp
[oP/oC]
S2
VP2
NP2
AM.
him
what I
me
WISHES.
LIKE!
IS
today.
VP1
Vgrp
NP[dO]
[complex]
Comp
[oP/oC]
NP2
S2
VP2
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
NP[dO]
[oP/oC]
[complex]
S2
Comp
VP2
NP2
[E]
[E]
[E]
[E]
[E]
WORK.
93
S1
NP1
VP1
Vgrp
NP[dO]
[oP/oC]
[complex]
S2
Comp
VP2
NP2
me
[E]
TO GIVE UP.
[E]
TO ANSWER
his questions.
independent.
[E]
TO BE
Note that:
c Only a small number of complex transitive verbs; usually those
mentioned in (31)a-e, (32)a-h, (33)a-g and (34)a-d; are used in this case.
d Only a few verbs in this case can be made passive. The direct object of
an active verb becomes the subject of the same verb in the passive:
(31)c. The baby WILL BE NAMED whatever his grandfather WISHES.
(32)d. The traffic WAS GOT MOVING (by the policeman).
(33)a. He WAS MADE TO WORK (by his tutor).
(34)d. The place WAS DECLARED TO BE free from infection (by an
official).
17.3.1.6 The complement of a preposition (cPrep, for short) can
also be realised by a finite Wh-clause, a non-finite to-infinitive clause
or an ing clause:
94
PP
S[(non-)finite clause]
[cPrep]
Comp
from
where
NP
you
SIT?
you
HAVE.
VP
d. I strongly OBJECT
to
what
e. It all DEPENDS
on
where
you
g. He HAS no idea
of
how
GO.
it
SHOULD BE DONE.
NP1
S[finite clause]
NP2
DET
VP1
N Comp
ART headN
S2
NP2
VP2
NP1
S[finite clause]
NP2
DET
NP
ART headN
c. I HEARD
VP
that fire
BURNS.
that I
rumour that he
IS LEAVING.
e. Thats
17.3.3
Comp
S1
VP1
Vgrp
[intens]
AP[sP/sC]
headA
S[(non-)finite clause]
S2
Comp
VP2
NP2
c. John
IS
d. She
IS
e. Leon
WAS
happy
f. Leon
WAS
aware
CAN PASS
FEEL
(40)a.
b. Jack APPEARED
96
he
(that
Sara
that
Sara
free (
[E]
eager (
[E]
COME
or not).
WON the
WON
the test).
race).
the race.
TO ASK QUESTIONS)!
TO SEE
her).
c. The tree IS
safe (
d. Elephants ARE NOT easy
[E]
[E]
TO CLIMB
up).
TO LASSO.
NP1
VP1
PRO
VP2
AdvP1
S[finite clause]
AdvP2
VP3
Adv Comp
Vgrp
[intrans]
S2
VP4
NP2
S3
NP3
PropN
VP3
Vgrp
[trans]
S2
NP2
NP[dO]
PropN
[trans]
VP2
Vgrp
S[finite clause]
PRO
S1
Comp
VP1
NP1
NP[dO]
she
SAW
BELIEVED
her.
97
S4
Conj
S3
NP3
VP3
S2
NP2
VP2
I DID NOT WANT to leave my bed but the wind BLEW so strong
(42)b.
S
[finite that-clause]
Comp
S1
NP1
VP1
98
18 Structure
The concept of STRUCTURE is essential in distinguishing between the
strings of words that are well-formed expressions in the language
and those that are not. [Burton-Roberts, 1997: 8] To show how things can
be analyzed into their constituent parts in this text, we use TREE-DIAGRAMS
the trees that are upside-down:
S
NP
VP
DET
DEM
headN
These
AP[sP/sC]
Vgrp
[intens]
concepts
are
basic.
This does not prevent us from having a quick look at some other
common types of diagrams:
c Fries diagrams (also called UPSIDEDOWN-T DIAGRAMS) in
Stageberg [1965] and Barsova et al [1969]:
concepts are
these
basic
_________________
substituted for as a whole by one of its constituent units; e.g. a noun may
stand for the whole noun phrase, c.f. big African lions roaming in the
jungle lions. [Jackson, 1980: 26]
19.2 EXOCENTRIC STRUCTURE
Phrases like the PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE (PP, for short) beside a
stream are said to be EXOCENTRIC. There is a TWO-WAY DEPENDENCE (,
for short) between beside and a stream as a whole: both of the two
constituents must occur to form the PP beside a stream; one of them
cannot stand for the whole phrase [Jackson, 1980: 26].
However, the PP beside a stream can also be considered
ENDOCENTRIC: Although beside and a stream are both needed to express
the spatial orientation in this case, it is the word beside that is giving the
phrase as a whole its locational character. So beside is the head of the
phrase. [Burton-Roberts, 1997: 43] If the PREPOSITION (P, for short)
beside is the HEAD (H, for short) of the prepositional phrase beside a
stream then a stream is functioning as COMPLEMENT (C, for short) to that
head: (H) beside a stream (C).
Each phrase must have a head. A noun phrase has a noun as head, a
verb phrase has a verb as head, a prepositional phrase a preposition as
head, and an adjective phrase an adjective as head. [Jacobs, 1995: 51]
Briefly, the STRUCTURES of MODIFICATION, COMPLEMENTATION, and
CO-ORDINATION are all endocentric whereas THE STRUCTURE OF
PREDICATION is exocentric. As to a prepositional phrase, it may be regarded
either as an exocentric structure or as an endocentric structure.
_________________
101
Co-NP
Co-NP
Conj
NP1
N1
(1)a. Max
and
NP2
NP1
NP2
N2
N1
N2
Adrian
Conj
NP3
N3
Co-AP
DEG
Co-AP
Conj
A1
Conj AP2
AP1
A2
DEG
Co-AP
AP1
Conj
AP2
DEG
(2)a. too stuffy and hot (2)b.too stuffy and hot (2)c. stuffy and too hot
The prepositional phrase up and down the stairs contain a COORDINATION OF PREPOSITIONS (Co-P, for short), with up and down
coordinated by and as in (3)a. In the foundation and under the rafters
is a COORDINATE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE (Co-PP, for short), with in the
foundation and under the rafters coordinated by and as in (3)b.
Co-PP
PP
Co-P
P1 Conj
NP
P2
the stairs
Conj
PP1
P1
NP1
PP2
P2
NP2
coordinator (and in this case) all have the same category label
(subject)
VP
(4)a. Ducks
b. The ducks
c. Those gigantic ducks
d. The mouth-watering duck on the table
e. The ones over there
f. Those on the left
g. Mine
h. These
i. They
(predicate)
paddled.
are paddling away.
were paddling away furiously.
wont be paddling away again.
must have paddled for a while.
have been paddling noisily.
kept on paddling quickly.
did paddle.
did.
The sentences (4)a-i have all been divided into two constituents; the
first is traditionally said to function as SUBJECT, and the second as PREDICATE.
One way of thinking of these functions is to think of the subject as being
used to mention something and the predicate as used to say something
true or false about the subject. [Burton-Roberts, 1997: 31]
While the noun phrase and the verb phrase of the sentences
marked (4)a-i display the STRUCTURE of MODIFICATION, the very
sentences are typical examples of the STRUCTURE of PREDICATION.
_________________
103
IMMEDIATE CONSTITUENT
the old man who lives there | has gone to his sons house
the old man | who lives there
who | lives there
the | old man
lives | there
old | man
stream.
Compare the diagram marked (1) with the diagrams marked (2) and (3):
S
Sam.
The diagram marked (1) fails to give any explanation of why the
words that occur in (1) form a well-formed English sentence, and why
those that occur in (2) and (3) do not.
105
states that a complement is that part of the sentence which follows the verb
and which thus completes the sentence and the latter [1995: 59] believes
that a complement is the phrase following the predicate and linked very
closely to it; it is the constituent that completes the predicate. However,
these authors differ in what they consider as complements.
The complements according to Richards, Platt and Weber [1985:52] are:
c subject complement: the complement linked to a subject by be or
an intensive verb: She IS a doctor.
d object complement, i.e. the complement linked to an object:
We MADE her the chairperson.
e adjective complement, i.e. the complement linked to an adjective:
IM glad that you can come.
f complement of a preposition, i.e. the complement linked to a preposition:
They ARGUED about what to do.
In addition to subject and object complements [1995: 58-60] and
adjective and prepositional complements [1995: 99], Jacobs also presents
noun complements [1995: 99-101]: Many nouns takes complement
clauses or complement prepositional phrases:
107
108
head adjective.
An adjective may be both pre-modified and post-modified. Preadjectival modifiers are always optional whereas post-adjectival
modifiers may be either optional or obligatory. The combination of an
110
or A MODIFIER.
phrase:
111
_________________
c. You HAD BETTER NOT SKI in case the weather is really bad.
d. We STARTED early for fear of a possible traffic jam.
30.2.11 Adverbial adjuncts of Purpose answer the question What
for? or For what purpose?:
(19)a. IVE GOT TO WRITE to report what Ive been doing so far.
b. She just WORKS for her own account.
c. HeS GONE on business, not for pleasure.
d. I JOG for the sake of my health.
e. The ground crew even CRAWLED into the un-pressurised luggage
compartments so as not to be left behind.
f. They always WALK
so that/in order that they may/might get plenty of exercise.
Purpose is also closely related to reason, it is possible, for example, to
paraphrase (19)a as The reason Ive got to write IS to report what Ive been
doing so far.
30.2.12 Adverbial adjuncts of Result:
In Purpose Sentences something is done deliberately in order to bring
about a certain result. The Subordinate Clause often has MAY or MIGHT. In
Result Sentences something happens by chance and brings about a certain
result. The Subordinate Clause never has MAY or MIGHT. [Campbell,1962: 58]
(20)a. He DRANK so much that hes got stomachache.
b. My father SMOKED so heavily that he got lung cancer.
c. He JUMPED so high that he easily crossed the barrier.
d. The third couple DANCED so beautifully that all the examiners
awarded them the maximal point.
30.2.13 Adverbial adjuncts of Concession express material that
runs counter to the proposition of the rest of the clause or, in the case of
adverbial adjuncts realized as clauses, counter to the proposition in the
main clause:
(21)a. He DOESNT SUCCEED however hard he tries.
b. She FAILS however much she does.
118
NP
PropN
VP1
VP2
Vgrp
[intrans]
NP
AdvP
[opA of Location]
PP
VP1
AdvP
VP2
[opA of Manner]
Vgrp
Adv
[intrans]
30.4 Also note that two or more adverbial adjuncts of different types
may occur together, following a variety of orders:
(27)a. He TRAVELS a lot (Degree)
from and to Hanoi (Source and Terminus).
b. She WROTE quickly (Manner) in order to finish in time (Purpose).
c. The cat CREPT silently (Manner) towards the bird (Direction).
d. I WANT TO GO somewhere slightly more exotic (Terminus)
for a change (Purpose).
e. He WILL certainly (Degree) DIE
if you dont call a doctor (Condition).
S
NP
VP1
PRO
AdvP1
[opA of Frequency]
VP2
VP3
DEG headAdv
VP4
Vgrp
[intrans]
AdvP2
[opA of Point of Time]
AdvP3
[opA of Terminus Purpose]
PP
PP
to bed
before midnight.
(29) a. We HAVE LIVED here (Location) for ten years (Extent in Time).
b. We WENT to Rome (Terminus) by Milan and Florence (Path).
c. A van carrying farm workers RAN off a foggy rural road (Source)
and PLUNGED into a murky canal (Terminus) today (Point of Time).
d. HeS COMING downstairs (Direction)
with two sleeping bags over the top of his head (Accompaniment).
e. She SLID over the questions (Path)
without answering them (Manner).
f. Daddy CAME home (Terminus) from work (Source)
earlier than usual (Manner).
30.7 Quite often, only one obligatory adverbial adjunct is enough to make
the meaning conveyed by the VP of a given sentence complete. In some
cases, however, both adverbial adjuncts in the VP are obligatory:
(30)a. The project WOULD GO forwards (Direction) as planned (Manner).
b. The project WOULD GO forwards (Direction).
c. The project WOULD GO as planned (Manner).
(31)a. The jumbo jet FLEW up (Direction) into the open air (Terminus).
b. The jumbo jet FLEW up (Direction).
c. The jumbo jet FLEW into the open air (Terminus).
It is not always easy to tell whether an adverbial adjunct is obligatory
or optional. However, this distinction is crucial as far as the meaning
expressed by the whole VP in which the adjunct occur is concerned.
30.8 The above illustrations indicate that a number of nouns or noun
phrases can, and sometimes must, appear without prepositions when they are
the adverbial adjuncts of Time, of Place or even of Manner in VPs.
Among these nouns/noun phrases are Tuesday; the next day; last night; next
week; the day before yesterday; yesterday afternoon; all the time; every Friday
evening; some time; home; there; here; then; this way; a bit; a lot; a pauper; a
rich man; a smiling, confident woman; etc. Jacobs [1995: 26] believes that
this characteristic is a relic marked by special case suffixes rather than
prepositions. In addition, adjectives like rich or poor can also be the
adverbial adjunct of Manner or of Guise.
122
S
NP1
S
VP1
PRO
VP2
NP
AdvP
Vgrp
[intrans]
(32)a. I
b. I
c. He
LL COME
LL COME
JUMPED
PRO
NP2
VP1
VP2
AdvP
Vgrp
[intrans]
AP
A
some time.
next week. (33)a. He
this way.
b. He
SET out
CAME back
poor.
rich.
_________________
NP
N1
DET
AP
N2
QA
ComN
ModN
headN
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP
DEG
(2) a much
headComparA
harder
headN
job
much /mt/ (quantifying adj., used with uncountable nouns; esp. with negative an
interrogative verbs or after very, as, how, so, too) = a large amount or quantity (of sth): I
havent got much money. Theres never very much news on Sundays. Take as much time
as you like. How much petrol do you need?
123
NP
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP
DEG1
DEG2
N1
DET
headAP
headN
DEG
headA
N2
AP1
(4)
much
headComparA
more
AP2
headN
white sand
4. In much more white sand, much is a degree adverb, premodifying more, which is the comparative form of the quantifying adjective
much in this case. The adjective phrase much more then pre-modifies the
N2 white sand, the head noun of which is uncountable.
5. In much the best meal Ive ever tasted, much is an adverb
of degree, pre-modifying the superlative the best. The subordinate
much /mt/ (adv., used with comparatives and superlatives) = to a great extent or degree:
much louder; much more confidently; Shes much better today; My favourite is usually
much the most expensive; I would never willingly go anywhere by boat, much less go on
a cruise.
124
adjective clause Ive ever tasted post-modifies the NP2 much the
best meal.
NP1
NP2
RESTRIC
SubACl
NP3
N1
DET
AP
N2
SuperA
headN
ART
much
the
best
meal
ve ever tasted
32 Mis-diagraming
Whats wrong with the two following diagrams?
NP
N1
DET
ART
(1)a. a
ANSWER:
NP
N1
DET
AP
N2
QA
headN
few
men
ART
(1)b. a
AP
N2
QA
headN
little
butter
NP
N
headN
men
DET
Q
N
headN
butter
_________________
125
STRUCTURALLY AMBIGUOUS
when its
NP
N1
DET
Q
N1
DET
N2
AP
N2
AP1
ModNP
headComN
ModN
N3
DET
headN
AP2
headN1
N4
headN2
(Japanese modifies
(1)b. some Japanese print collectors
(Japanese modifies the noun print.)
the compound noun print collectors.)
33.1.2 The old Rumanian history teacher can be interpreted in
three different ways:
(2)a. the old teacher of history who comes from Rumania
NP
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP1
A1
N3
AP2
A2
headComN
ModN
the
126
old
Rumanian history
headN
teacher
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP1
ModNP
N3
DET
N4
AP2
A1
the
old
headN1
AP3
N5
A2
headN2
Rumanian
history teacher
DET
ART
N1
N2
AP1
N3
AP2
A1
ModNP
N4
DET
the
old
AP3
N5
A2
headN2
Rumanian
history
headN1
teacher
127
NP
N1
DET
N2
AP1
QA
[ComparA]
N1
DET
AP
AP2
N3
headN
DEG
headA
[ComparAdv]
N2
headN
128
NP
NP
N1
DET
ART
N1
DET
AP
N2
headComN
ART
N3
headComN
DET
ModN
N2
AP
ModNP
headN
headN
headN
NP1
N1
DET
N2
ART AP1
A
(2)a. an old
AP2
N1
DET1
PossNP
N3
NP2
PossCommN
headN
girls
bicycle
PossMarker
N2
DET2
ART
AP
A
(2)b. an
headN1
old
N3
headN
girl
s bicycle
129
NP
N1
DET
ART
N1
DET1
PossNP
N2
AP1
NP2
headN1
PossMarker
N3
DET2
N2
PossCommN headN
ART
headComN
ModN
AP2
ModN
headN2
NP1
N1
DET
N2
ART AP1
A
DET1
AP2
PossCommN
PossNP
N3
NP2
headComN
ModN headN
130
headComN
DET2
ART
N1
AP
A
N3
headN2
coat
DET
ART
N2
AP1
A
AP2
PossCommN
DET1
N1
PossNP
headN1
NP2
N3
N2
DET
ART
headN
PossMarker
AP
N3
headN2
DET
ART
PossNP
N2
AP1
A
N1
DET1
AP2
PossCommN
NP2
N3
PossMarker
N2
DET
headN
headN1
AP
N3
headN2
131
NP
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP
N1
DET1
ART
N2
AP
ModNP
PossCommN
ModN
headN
N3
DET2
headComN
PossCommN
(7)b. a
camels
headN1
headN2
hair
brush
DET
DEM
NP
N2
AP
A
N1
DET1
DEM
headComN
ModN
headN
ModNP
headN
N3
DET2
AP
stuff
A
(8)b. that
4
N2
AP
N4
headN
brush 1. [C] implement with bristles of hair, wire, nylon, etc. in a block of wood, etc.
and used for scrubbing, sweeping, cleaning, painting, tidying the hair, etc.:
NP
N1
DET
ART
N2
AP
A
N1
DET1
ART
ComN
ModN
ModNP
headN
N3
DET2
headN
N2
AP
AP
N4
headN
service
(9)b. the basic
book service
NP
N1
DET
N2
ART AP
A
N1
DET
ComN
ModN
AP
N2
ModNP
headN
ART
headN
N3
DET
AP
N4
headN
133
DET
ART
NP
N1
DET1
AP
N2
ComN
ModN
ART
N2
AP
ModNP
headN
N3
DET2
headN
AP
N4
headN
old
car enthusiast
NP
N1
DET
N2
AP1
QA
[ComparA]
AP
AP2
N3
headN
N2
N1
DET
ferocious curries
DEG
headA
[ComparAdv]
(12)b.
MORE
N2
headN
ferocious curries
NP2
N1
DET1
PP1
headN1 P1
NP3
NP4
ART1
DET2
AP2
N2
ART2 headN2
(1)a.
the dog
PP2
P2
NP5
NP3
DET
ART
headN
(1)b. the
AP1
PP1
PP2
135
NP1
AP1
NP2
N1
DET
ART
PP
N2
AP2
A
NP3
NP4
headN1
DET
SubACl
N1
ART headN2
(2)a. the young calf of the boy who was standing near the gate
NP1
NP2
AP1
NP3
N1
DET1
ART1
AP2
AP
A
SubACl
PP
N2
headN1
NP2
AP
NP3
(3)a.
136
SubACl
DET
ART
headN
PP
NP
AP
NP2
N
DET1
ART1
PP
headN1
NP3
NP4
N
DET2
ART2
of
SubACl
headN2
NP2
AP2
NP3
DET
ART
PP1
PP2
headN
NP2
DET
ART
headN
PP1
P
NP2
headGer
AdvP
PP2
137
NP1
NP2
SubACl1
N1
DET
AP
N2
ComA
headN
SubACl2
Conj
SubACl3
that he later traded for a motorcycle and that he loved to tinker with
which he later traded for a motorcycle and which he loved to tinker with
NP1
SubACl
NP2
N1
DET
ART
AP
ComA
N2
headN
NP1
NP2
SubACl
DET
N1
ART
headN
(6) [that he later traded] for a motorcycle which he loved to tinker with
33.4. Account for STRUCTURALLY NON-AMBIGUOUS noun phrases.
Are the following noun phrases STRUCTURALLY NON-AMBIGUOUS?
If not, how do you account for this?
138
ANSWER:
1. young car salesmen: Since people, but not things, can be described
as young, young must modify a constituent of which salesmen is the head. It
cannot modify car and hence cannot form a constituent with car. The natural
structural analysis of this noun phrase, then, is:
NP
N1
DET
N2
headComN1
AP
ModN
young
headComN2
car
salesmen
DET
N2
AP
ModNP
N3
DET
headComN
AP
N4
headN
second-hand
car
salesmen
139
N1
DET
Q
N2
AP
A
headComN
ModN
some
headN
S
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP
NP[dO]
PropN
VP
Vgrp
[intens]
NP[sP/sC]
APs only ever identify properties. NPs, by contrast, can be used both
to identify properties and to refer to individuals. This is why an NP can
function both as predicative (complementing an intensive verb) and as
direct object (complementing a monotransitive verb). [BurtonRoberts, 1997: 87]
34.2 NP direct objects of a monotransitive verb
or NP adverbial adjuncts of an intransitive verb
Since not all verbs followed by an NP are monotransitive, it is crucial to
distinguish an NP direct object of a monotransitive verb from an NP
adverbial adjunct of an intransitive verb. Consider the two following
sentences:
S
NP1
headN
S
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP1
NP2[dO]
PRO
VP1
VP2
Vgrp
[intrans]
AdvP
[opA of Point ofTime]
NP2
(1)a. Lightning STRUCK the oak tree. (2)a. They ARRIVED the next day.
One useful way to test whether or not a sentence really contains a
monotransitive verb plus its NP direct object is to see if it has a passive
counterpart. Compare:
(1)b. The oak tree WAS STRUCK by lightning.
(2)b. *The next day WAS ARRIVED by them.
The oak tree can be the subject of the passive sentence (1)b;
therefore, struck is monotransitive. The next day cannot be the subject
of the passive sentence (2)b; it must be an optional adverbial adjunct of
Point of Time modifying arrive, which is an intransitive verb.
In addition, adjuncts are more freely moved than required
constituents [Jacobs, 1995: 55]. Thus, as an optional adverbial adjunct of
arrive, the next day can easily be shifted to the front of (2)c:
(2)c. The next day they ARRIVED.
However, (1)c does not sound English:
141
NP
PropN
VP
PP [sP/sC]
Vgrp
[intens]
NP
VP
PropN
Vgrp
[intens]
(1) Oscar SHOULD BE in the engine room. (2) *Oscar SHOULD BE.
However, beside a stream in (3) is only an optional adverbial
adjunct of Location of the intransitive verb sunbathed since (4) is still a
complete English sentence:
S
NP
PropN
S
VP1
VP2
Vgrp
[intrans]
NP
AdvP
[opA of Location]
PP
PropN
(4) Phil
VP1
Vgrp
[intrans]
SUNBATHED.
ANSWER:
intransVPP
3
4
intransVPP
intransVPP
monotransVAC meaning arrested (the
criminal)
and took (him) to the police station
monotransVAC meaning trained
monotransVAC meaning
145
intransVPP
monotransVAC meaning attacked
146
monotrans-prepVprepO
She SMILED/GRINNED/STARED/
monotrans-prepVprepO
GLANCED/SQUINTED/SHOUTED at me.
monotrans-prepVprepO
monotrans-prepVprepO
monotrans-prepVprepO
monotrans-prepVprepO
_________________
35 Sentence analyses
35.1 Identify the syntactic function of a prepositional phrase.
S
NP
PropN
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans-prep]
PP [prepO]
VP
Vgrp
[intens]
PP[sP/sC]
147
S
NP
VP1
PropN
VP2
Vgrp
[intrans]
AdvP
[opA of Location]
PP
NP
VP1
Vgrp
[intrans]
AdvP
[obA of Location]
PP
148
(2)
VP
PropN
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP2[dO]
Holden
IS WRITING
letters
PP[iO]
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
NP2[dO]
NP3
DET
AP
N1
PP
headN
letters
to Africa.
35.2.2 Considering (3) *Max bring the station the hyena, we see that
(3) is not a reasonable paraphrase of (3). Therefore, the PP to the station
is the obligatory adverbial adjunct of Terminus of bring, which is a
monotransitive verb:
S
NP1
PropN
(3) Max
VP
Vgrp
[monotrans]
BRING
NP2[dO]
the hyena
PP
[obA of Terminus]
to the station.
149
Consider (4) Max lent the Dramatic Society his hyena. (4) is a
reasonable paraphrase of (4). So the PP to the Dramatic Society is the
iO of bring, which is a ditransitive verb.
S
NP1
PropN
VP
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP2[dO]
his hyena
PP[iO]
35.2.3 Notice that it is only NPs denoting animate things (or things
that could be interpreted as being animate) that can be indirect objects.
Mary is a person; therefore, for Mary in (5) is the iO of the
ditransitive verb bake:
(5) William BAKED a cake for Mary.
S
Vgrp
dO
iO
[ditrans]
(5) William
(6) William
150
Vgrp
[ditrans]
BAKED
BAKED
VP
NP[dO]
a cake
a cake
PP[iO]
for Mary.
for Christmas.
ANSWER:
The following pairs of sentences differ from each another in the internal
structure of their verb phrases:
151
NP
VP
N1
DET
ART
N2
QA
NUM
Vgrp
[intransVAC]
NP
N1
DET
AR
headN
VP1
VP2
N2
QA
NUM
AdvP
[opA of Direction]
Vgrp
[intrans]
headN
Adv
(5)a. The two friends FELL out. (5)b. The two friends WALKED out.
35.3.4 Broke in (6)a is an intransitive verb meaning separated into two
or more parts as a result of force or strain (but not by cutting).
to break.
NP
DET
ART
(6)a.
VP
N
Vgrp
[intrans]
NP1
PropN
VP
NP2[dO]
Vgrp
[monotrans]
headN
the samovar.
with. Lots of money is the direct object while Liz is the indirect object,
both complementing the verb.
S
NP1
PropN
S
VP
Vgrp NP2[dO]
[complex]
NP1
NP3[oC]
PropN
VP
Vgrp
[ditrans]
NP2[iO]
NP3[dO]
(7)a. Ed WILL MAKE Liz a good wife. (7)b. Ed WILL MAKE Liz lots of money.
153
VP
Vgrp
[complex]
NP2[dO]
PP[oP/oC]
in a mess.
NP1
VP1
VP2
Vgrp
NP2[dO]
[monotrans]
AdvP
[opA of Time]
PP
154
155
(6)b. He RETURNED
home
several hours later.
S + intrans headV + Adv/adjunct of Terminus + AdvP/adjunct of Time
Note that as a monotransitive verb, returned means give, bring, send
(sb, sth) back; as an intransitive verb, returned means came or went back to
a place.
(7)a. Mark
GOT
a scheme to win Kathys heart.
S + monotrans headV +
NP/dO
(7)b. Mark
GOT
a job to earn money for his holiday.
S + monotrans headV + NP/dO + InfP/adjunct of Purpose
(8)a. I
RAN across
my old friend.
S + monotransVAC/monotrans inseparable phrasal headV NP/dO
(8)b. I
RAN
across a field.
S + intrans headV + PP/adjunct of Path
(9)a. LEAVE
the door open.
complex trans headV + NP/dO +A/oC
(9)b. LEAVE the cooking to me.
ditrans headV + NP/dO + PP/iO
(10)a. Several women MOVED
to help her.
S + intrans headV + InfP/adjunct of Purpose
(10)b. Several women OFFERED
to help her.
S + monotrans headV + InfP/dO
(11)a. We
ASKED
some questions.
S + monotrans headV NP/dO
(11)b. We
ASKED
three times.
S + intrans headV + NP/adjunct of Frequency
156
(12)a. I
LOVED
her
the instant I saw her.
S + monotrans headV + pronoun/dO + NP/adjunct of Time
(12)b. I
GAVE
her
the ticket she asked.
S + ditrans headV + pronoun/iO + NP/dO
(13)a. I never
HOLD
that man
my friend.
S + Adv + complex headV + NP/dO + NP/object(ive) complement (oC)
adjunct of Frequency
157
2. [He]
+ PP/prepO
Thus, the whole sentence may mean: She made up her mind (while she was
travelling) on the train.
She
DECIDED
on the train.
S + intrans headV + PP/adjunct of Location
7. He runs the office and deals with critical clients well.
This verb phrase is structurally ambiguous because:
(7)a. Well is an adverb, an (optional) adverbial adjunct of manner
of the verb phrase deals with critical clients.
With critical clients is a (obligatory) prepositional object
(prepO, for short) of the monotransitive prepositional verb deals:
He runs the office and DEALS
with critical clients
well.
S+
monotrans prepositional headV PP/prepO adjunct of Manner
(7)b. Well is an adverb, an (optional) adverbial adjunct of manner
of the structure of co-ordination which consists of two VPs: runs the office
and deals with critical clients. These two VPs are linked by the coordinate conjunction and:
He RUNS the office and DEALS with critical clients
S + VP1 + co-ordinate conjunction + VP2
well.
Adv/adjunct of Manner
160
= S + ditransV + dO
iO
Max FOUND Ed an amusing companion. = Max FOUND an amusing companion for Ed.
37 Phrase structure
37.1 Definition:
Phrase structure is the division of a sentence into parts, and
the division of those parts into subparts. [Kaplan, 1989: 191] For
instance, the sentence Our French teachers have just left for France
can be first divided into two parts as follows:
S
Its usually easy to split a sentence into two parts. The left part
normally functions as subject, the right part as predicate. Within the subject
and the predicate, though, the division isnt always so straightforward. In the
above sentence, for example, there are two possibilities for dividing up the
NP subject our French teachers:
(1) Our French teachers may mean our teachers, who come
from France. French in this case is an adjective of nationality meaning
of or concerning France. It pre-modifies the head noun teachers,
resulting in the noun phrase French teachers.
(2) Our French teachers may mean our teachers whose subject
is French. French in this case is a noun meaning the language spoken in
France. It is one of the two free bases which are combined together to form
the compound noun French teachers.
NP
N1
DET
PossA
NP
AP
N2
headN
DET
teachers
PossA
headComN
ModN
(2) our
French
headN
teachers
You
I
They
letter
existed
Substituting of
gives:
clearly
green
be the same internal structure. For instance, if you suspect (as you should)
that in the sentence Max devoured the sweet jam the word sequence the
sweet jam is a phrase, you should try to conjoin it with something similar,
like the stale toast: On the table is the sweet jam and the stale toast.
This is a grammatical sentence, so you conclude, tentatively, that the sweet
jam is a phrase. [Kaplan, 1989: 195]
37.2.3 Apply the MOVEMENT criterion: Any sequence of words that
moves as a unit, linguists have reasoned, is a unit [Kaplan, 1989: 196]. For
instance, in Max bought some great toys for Alisons four-year-old
daughter, the word sequence some great toys and Alisons four-yearold daughter can both be switched:
(10)a. Max BOUGHT some great toys for Alisons four-year-old daughter.
166
167
substitute the, my, this, one, in each case preserving grammatically: the
horse, my horse, this horse and one horse.
(1)
a white horse
Substituting:
the
my
this
one
gives:
the horse
my horse
this horse
one horse
On the basis of this, we can divide the phrase like this: a white horse.
However, for white horse, we can also find grammatical substitutes:
piano, horse, tree, man, soul: a piano, a horse, a tree, a man, a soul.
(2)
a white horse
piano
horse
Substituting: tree
man
soul
a piano
a horse
gives:
a tree
a man
a soul
On the basis of this, we can divide the phrase like this: a white horse.
Unfortunately, substitution fails to tell us which of the two groupings, either
(1) or (2), is correct.
37.3.2 How helpful is conjoinability in helping us decide on the phrase
structure of a white horse? Unfortunately, not very. Both a white and white
horse are conjoinable with similar sequence:
(3)a. A6 white horse and gray pony7 WERE DELIVERED yesterday.
b. A white and a gray horse8 WERE DELIVERED yesterday.
6
Since a white horse and a gray pony have exactly the same internal structure, the
repeated indefinite article a/an is acceptably omitted in the second noun phrase, i.e.
after the co-ordinate conjunction and.
7
pony /p6n1/ (noun) a small type of horse
8
Since a white horse and a gray horse have exactly the same internal structure, the
shared head noun of these two noun phrases , which is horse, is acceptably omitted in
the first.
168
ART
*NP
N1
DET
AP
N2
headN
white
ART
white
headN
horse
horse
169
37.3.4 There is a so-called pronoun one that can refer to white horse
as an antecedent, if not in a white horse, at least in the identity structured
the white horse:
(8) I want the white horse by the gate, not the one in the stall.
On the basis of movement and being an antecedent for a pro-form,
then, we can be fairly confident about assigning the phrase structure a
white horse to the phrase a white horse.
________________
170
Deep structure
TRANSFORMATIONAL RULES
Surface structure
S NP VP
NP PropN
VP V NP AdvP
S NP VP
NP PropN
VP V NP AdvP
Deep structure: John LOVES Richard more than Martha LOVES Richard.
The two above examples prove that two different deep structures may
share the same surface structure as a result of the application of a certain
transformational rule. Note also that a sentence is structurally ambiguous
when its only surface structure is derived from two or more different deep
structures.
________________
the book
a noun or a
by him
him
about him
for
174
Co-AP
AP1
Conj
A1
(1)a. stupid
Co-NP
AP2
A2
but persevering
NP1
NP2
N1
N2
Conj
NP3
N3
with
It was huge.
It was terrible.
It was awesome.
It was HUGE!
It was TERrible!
It was AWEsome!
41 What is syntax?
Syntax is a term used for the study of the rules governing the way words
are combined to form SENTENCES." [Finch, 2000: 77]
Syntax is the study of how words combine to form sentences and the rules
which govern the information of sentences [Richards, Platt and Weber,
1987: 285]
Cu phap la cap o duy nhat cua ngon ng trc tiep lien he vi viec bieu at
t tng va cau la phng tien hnh thanh va dien at trc tiep mot t duy
tron ven. [Cao Xuan Hao, 1991: 24]
177
**********
E THI TUYEN SINH SAU AI HOC
CHUYEN NGANH PHNG PHAP GIANG DAY TIENG ANH
Mon thi: LINGUISTICS
Thi gian: 180 phut
PART I. SYNTAX
178
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
ANSWER KEY
I climbed out of bed and jumped into the shower. not a constituent
(Out of bed I climbed and into the shower I jumped).
Writing (3 points)
1. Do you or dont you agree with the following statement by Kaplan (1989:
267): Embedded sentences typically function as subjects and direct objects
and as sentence-adverbial phrases. Give examples to support your answer.
2. What do you know about the post-modification in English adjective
phrases? Give three appropriate examples to illustrate your presentation.
3. How do sentences in each of the following pairs differ from each other?
(3a) I will see you the day before you go.
(3b) I will give you the information before you go.
(3c) Several women moved to help her.
(3d) Several women offered to help her.
4. Explain the structural ambiguity of the phrase and the sentence given
below, using tree diagrams:
(4a) the motor boat of the man that would not start
(4b) Fred said that he would pay me on Thursday.
PART TWO: SEMANTICS
1. What are semantic features? Consider the following table and give the
semantic features to each of the given words.
English
Vietnamese
anh
brother
sibling
em
sister
ch
181
Chinese
huynh
e
muoi
ty
182
ANSWER KEYS
Part one: Syntax (30 iem = 3/10)
(6 iem) 1. Students are supposed to answer positively with a few examples like:
Embedded sentences functioning as subjects:
(2 iem)
That Mary swallowed a gold fish grossed everyone out.
It grossed everyone out that Mary swallowed a gold fish.
Where we are going has not been decided.
Embedded sentences functioning as objects:
(2 iem)
Jack made whoever came here the same offer. (IO)
They found what they wanted. (DO)
We will name the baby whatever his grandmother wishes. (OC)
Embedded sentences functioning as sentence-adverbial phrases: (2 iem)
Julia laughed when Max snored.
when Max snored, Julia laughed.
(10 iem) 2.
2.1. Many adjectives do not allow any kind of post-modification: big, blue,
sudden, tall, astute, etc.
(2 iem)
2.2. For most English adjectives, post-modification is optional; for a few,
however, it is obligatory. Aware, for example, cannot occur without its
adjective complement:
* He was aware.
He was aware of a creaking noise.
(2 iem)
2.3. There are three kinds of post-modifier or complement:
(3 iem)
- a prepositional phrase: He is very anxious about Jims health.
- an infinitive phrase: He is very anxious to please everybody.
- a that-clause: He is very anxious that no one should excuse him of laziness.
2.4. Not all adjectives allow all the three above-mentioned kinds of
complement. Some allow only one or two of them. Interesting, for example,
may take only an infinitive phrase: this book is very interesting to read; safe
allows either a prepositional phrase or an infinitive clause (but not a thatclause): this toy is safe for children, this tree is not safe to climb up. (3 iem)
183
(8 iem) 3.
verb Head
simple transitive verb
(3a) I will see
pronoun
direct object
you
noun phrase/adverbial
adjunct of time of will see
the day before you go.
(2 iem)
verb Head
pronoun noun phrase subordinate clause/adverbial
double transitive verb IO
DO
adjunct of time of will give
(3b) I will give
you the information
before you go.
(2 iem)
verb Head
intransitive verb
(3c) Several women moved
infinitive phrase/adverbial
adjunct of purpose
to help her.
(2 iem)
verb Head
simple transitive verb
(3d) Several women
offered
infinitive phrase
nominal/DO
to help her.
(2 iem)
184
185
186
YUUUZ
E THI TUYEN SINH SAU AI HOC
I. Semantics:
Mon c s: LINGUISTICS
Thi gian lam bai: 180 phut
Part 1: Why is it said that sense and reference are two aspects of the
meaning of a word? Which of the two is the aspect of meaning that
first come to the mind of a child who is exposed to his/her native
language at an early stage (say, from the age of 8 months to the age of
15 months)?
Part 2: What is the connotation of a word? Identify three possible (positive or
negative) connotations of the word titanic.
Part 3: Read the following sentence carefully and answer the questions.
188
AP AN MON C S: LINGUISTICS
I. Semantics (10 points):
Part 1 (3 points):
1.1 It is said that sense and reference are two aspects of the meaning of a
word because the meaning of a word comes to our mind sometimes as
sense (0.3 points) and sometimes as reference (0.3 points).
189
Chinese
(0.25 points)
The classification of language into English, Chinese, etc. is often referred
to as taxonomy (0.25 points).
3. The word tongue in the above sentence is not an instance of ambiguity
(0.25 points) because the context English is spoken by more people
than any other tongue is clear that tongue here can only be
interpreted as a synonym of language (0.25 points).
4. The figure of speech found in the use of tongue in the above sentence
is metonymy (0.25 points) because tongue, which is associated with
language (0.25 points), especially spoken language, is substituted for
language (0.25 points). However, native speakers of English use the
word tongue with this sense so naturally that many of them are
unaware that that this is an instance of metonymy (0.25 points).
Part 4 (2 points):
1. In this utterance, the speaker performs an illocutionary act of
warning (0.4 points). This speech act is a directive (0.4 points).
2. In this utterance, the speaker performs an illustration act of
stating/reporting a fact (0.2 points). This speech act is a
representative (0.4 points).
3. In this utterance, the speaker performs an illocutionary act of
exclaiming (0.2 points). This speech act is an expressive (0.4 points).
190
Part 1 (2 points):
Research into the health
is going.
Part 2 (3 points): The syntactic function typical of a noun phrase are subjects
of a verb (0.3 points), object of a verb (direct object, in direct object)
(0.3 points), object of a preposition (0.3 points), and complement
(subject complement, object complement) (0.3 points).
E.g. My dog is sleeping.
(subject of is)
(0.3 points)
I gave the little boy a toy.
(IO)
(DO)
(0.6 points)
Hes fond of Chinese tea.
(0.3 points)
(object of the prep. of)
She is a counsellor.
(subject complement)
(0.3 points)
I consider him my archenemy.
(object complement)
(0.3 points)
Part 3 (1 point):
The two phrases are both adjectivals (0.2 points), very beautiful being
an adjective phrase (0.2 points) and of great beauty a prepositional phrase
(0.2 points). Although they are almost the same in meaning (0.2 points), of
great beauty is a much more formal structure than is very beautiful.
191
Part 4 (2 points):
Verbs that do not allow passive transformation are of two main types
(0.2 points): all intransitive verbs (0.3 points) including linking verbs (0.3 points)
and some transitive verbs, especially verbs of state (0.3 points).
E.g.
Active
Passive
He worked very hard.
(0.3 points)
(intransitive verb)
He was a marketeer.
(0.3 points)
(linking verb/copula)
He has two sister.
(0.3 points)
(transitive verb of state)
Part 5 (2 points):
There are three types of noun clause (0.2 points): that-clause (i.e. a
noun clause beginning with that (0.2 points), whether/if-clause (i.e. a noun
clause beginning with whether/if) (0.3 points), and (W)H-clause (i.e. a noun
clause beginning with W)H-word) (0.3 points).
E.g. He said that he would come.
(0.3 points)
She wanted to know whether he could come.
(0.3 points)
She asked me who would come.
(0.3 points)
III. Academic writing (10 points):
PART I. SYNTAX
Descriptism
are Use
of
naturally-occurring
language data as evidence
NP
VP
V
Pro.
He
NP
Art.
killed
the
PP
N
robber
194
Prep.
with
NP
Art.
knife.
NP
VP
V
NP
Art
NP
N
PP
Prep.
Pro.
He
killed
the
robber
with
NP
Art.
knife.
He
turned
at
Lancaster.
He
turned off
(1/4m)
Content:
Organisation:
Grammar:
Language use:
1m
1m
196
1m
1m