Download Video Transcript 3

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pleonasm wikipedia , lookup

Chinese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Preposition and postposition wikipedia , lookup

Germanic strong verb wikipedia , lookup

Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup

Pluperfect wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Turkish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Italian grammar wikipedia , lookup

English passive voice wikipedia , lookup

Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Spanish verbs wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek verbs wikipedia , lookup

Latin conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Icelandic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

English clause syntax wikipedia , lookup

English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Finnish verb conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Danish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Kannada grammar wikipedia , lookup

Participle wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Griffith English Language Institute
HELP Yourself Resource Transcript: Complex Structures Part 3
This video is the third in a series on Complex Structures. It focuses on participle phrases.
Before watching this video, you should watch the previous videos in this series, as well as
the videos on Active and Passive Voice, and Verb Tenses.
In this video, we will cover




the form of participles
the purpose of a participle phrase
the location of a participle phrase within a sentence, and
the use of commas with participle phrases
We will also look at some practice examples.
Form of Participles
Let’s begin by describing the form of participles. There are two types in English: a present
participle and a past participle. The present participle is formed by adding _ing to the base
form of a verb. The past participle often takes the same form as the past simple verb - but
not always, as you can see in some of these examples.
Purpose
Participles can be used for various purposes. First, they can be used to form a verb tense.
All continuous (or progressive) tenses are formed with the present participle, for example,
and all perfect tenses are formed with the past participle.
Participles can be used for other purposes too. For example, past participles are used to
form the passive voice in all tenses.
Present participles can be used as nouns, called a ‘gerund’. As you see, this has nothing to
do with a verb tense.
Participles can also act as adjectives to describe a noun. Again, this has nothing to do with a
verb tense.
We can also use participles to form a participle phrase. A participle phrase is a group of
words that starts with a present or past participle like this:


Confusing the students, ….
Confused by their tutor, ...
To form a sentence, a participle phrase needs to be joined to an independent clause, like
this:


Confusing the students, the tutor provided an irrelevant example.
Confused by their tutor, the students turned to each other for help.
1
Griffith English Language Institute
Each participle phrase describes a noun in the independent clause. It does not refer to the
noun inside the participle phrase itself. In the first sentence, the tutor is the noun being
referred to; in the second, the students are being referred to.
How do we know whether to use a past or present participle phrase? You should get a
sense of the active or passive nature of each participle phrase. In the first example, we
sense that the tutor is actively doing something (in this case, confusing the students). In the
second example, we sense that the students were passively acted on; they are confused
because of the actions of the tutor.
Location
Now let’s consider the location of participle phrases within a sentence. In our previous
examples, they are at the start of each sentence, but we could move them to the middle like
this:


The tutor, confusing the students even more, provided an irrelevant example.
The students, confused by their tutor, turned to each other for help.
Or we could try moving these phrases to the end of each sentence:


The tutor provided an irrelevant example, confusing the students even more.
The students turned to each other for help, confused by their tutor.
In these last examples, though, the participle phrases are far away from the nouns that they
refer to, which can sometimes make it hard for the reader to follow the meaning. For this
reason, it is better to keep the participle phrase close to what it is describing within the
sentence.
Commas
Let’s now consider commas. In the examples so far, commas have been used to separate
the participle phrase from the independent clause but this may not always be the case. Look
at these two examples: one uses commas and one does not. Do they mean the same thing?


The students confused by the tutor asked him for help.
The students, confused by the tutor, asked for help.
Did the same students ask for help in these two examples?
In the first sentence, only the students who were confused asked for help. In the second, all
of the students asked for help. These last two examples are also known as reduced subject
relative clauses. For more on defining relative clauses, see the previous video in this series.
Practice
So, now you know that a participle phrase describes a noun in an independent clause, that it
can imply a passive or active state, that it can be placed at the beginning, middle or end of a
sentence, and that it may or may not require a comma.
Let’s practise what we’ve learned.
2
Griffith English Language Institute
How would you combine these sentences with a participle phrase?


The stream was frozen by the long hard winter.
The stream finally began to thaw.
Here is one possibility:

The stream, frozen by the long hard winter, finally began to thaw.
How about this one:


Climate change interferes with food chains.
Climate change affects global ecosystems.

Climate change interferes with food chains, affecting global ecosystems.
Let’s try one more:



The researchers were excited by their results.
The researchers wanted to discuss their progress with peers.
The researchers immediately scheduled a teleconference.
One possibility is:

Excited by their results and wanting to discuss their progress with peers, the
researchers immediately scheduled a teleconference.
Notice in this last example that we have included two participle phrases, each describing ‘the
researchers’ in the independent clause.
Also notice that while one of these phrases uses a past participle, the other uses a present
participle. This reflects the different passive and active states of each phrase. Who or what
made the researchers excited? (Themselves or something else?). In this case, it was
‘something else’ (the results) so we use the past participle to indicate the researchers’
passive state. Who or what made the researchers want to discuss their progress –
themselves or something else? Themselves. It was a state that originated from within them,
so we use the present participle.
As you may have realised, the grammar for participle phrases can be quite complex and you
should not overuse them. Refer to the exercises below for more on this topic.
3