* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Seven basic sentence patterns
Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup
Malay grammar wikipedia , lookup
Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup
Old Irish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup
Sloppy identity wikipedia , lookup
American Sign Language grammar wikipedia , lookup
Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup
Japanese grammar wikipedia , lookup
French grammar wikipedia , lookup
Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Navajo grammar wikipedia , lookup
Preposition and postposition wikipedia , lookup
Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup
Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Antisymmetry wikipedia , lookup
Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup
Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup
Turkish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Icelandic grammar wikipedia , lookup
Georgian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Romanian grammar wikipedia , lookup
Lexical semantics wikipedia , lookup
Kannada grammar wikipedia , lookup
Chinese grammar wikipedia , lookup
Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup
English clause syntax wikipedia , lookup
Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup
Lecture2 • • • • • • Sentence structure Objectives: 1. Grammatical Hierarchy 2. Clause elements : subject and predicate 3. Two ways of sentence analysis 4. Seven basic sentence patterns 5. Transformation and expansion of basic clause types 2. Grammatical Hierarchy • • • • • • • • • Morpheme (free morpheme, bound morpheme) Word 1)classification in terms of word-formation (simple word, derivative , compound) 2) classification in terms of grammatical function (open-class words, closed-class words) Phrase (noun phrase, verb phrase, adjective phrase, adverb phrase, prepositional phrase) • Clause • ( independent clause , dependent/subordinate clause) – subject clause – object clause – predicative clause – adverbial clause • -- appositive clause. • Sentence (full sentence , minor sentence) • 1) classification in terms of the purpose of the speaker • statement, question ( general question, special question,alternative question ,tag question), imperative sentence , exclamation 2. Clause elements • Subject and predicate • Subject— the topic or theme of the sentence, which tells of what the sentence is about. It is generally realized by a noun phrase or an equivalent of noun phrase • • • • • Predicate—says something about the subject and keeps the new information which the speaker or writer wants to transmit to the listener or reader. It generally consists of a verb phrase with or without a complementation. 3. Two ways of sentence analysis • 1) To divide the predicate into predicate verb, object, complement and adverbial. These elements together with the subject make the five clause elements. • 2) To divide the predicate into operator (aux. Or the first aux. in a complex verb phrase) and predication (It comprises the main verb with its complementation, which including object, complement or adverbial.) 4. Seven basic sentence patterns • Simple sentences have seven basic patterns: • • • • • • • SV (主—动) SVC (主—动—补) SVO(主—动—宾) SV0O(主—动—宾-宾) SVOC(主—动—宾—补) SVA(主—动—状) SVOA(主—动—宾—状) • SV (usu. V is intransitive verb.) • • --Day broke. --Things change. • • • SVC ( usu. V is linking verb.) • --The doctors seemed very capable. --He died young. SVO (usu. V is transitive verb/ monotransitive verb.) • • --I want a cup of tea. • • --Robbie didn’t deny the facts. --She heard whisperings. • • • SV0O ( V is ditransitive verb.) • • --We gave the baby a bath. --He gave me a nice present. --Judith paid me a visit. • SVOC(主—动—宾—补)( V is complex transitive verb.) • • --I found this book easy. • --He watched the maid come in. • --I heard him coming up the stairs slowly, as if he were carrying something heavy. • • • • • SVA (A=adverbial) --He will flying to shanghai. --They stayed in a hotel. SVOA --I met her at the railway station. -- I put the material evidence in front of him. SV0O • In SV0O,sometimes indirect object can be shifted to the direct object by using correspondent prepositions such as “to”, “for”,“of” . that is: “v+sb/sth+prep+sb”。 compare: • Betty gave her daughter an apple. • →Betty gave an apple to her daughter. • Father bought him a bike. • →Father bought a bike for him. He asked me a question. • →He asked a question of me. SV0O • 1) Verbs that can be used in “v.+ sb/sth+to+sb”: • bring, take, show, pass, lend, return; owe, offer, leave, give, send, teach, read, write, pay etc. eg: • owe money to the bank offer battle to someone SV0O • --We want a teacher to teach us violin. • --He offered me a glass of wine.. • --She brought her sister to my office. • --He died two and a half years later, leaving everything to his wife. • 2) Verbs that can be used in “v+sb/sth +for+sb”: • find, spare, save, fetch, buy, get, make • choose, pick, select , sing, play, cook, • -- Please fetch some sandwiches for this hungry boy. • 2) Verbs that can be used in “v+sb/sth+for +sb”: • --Would you please spare me a cup of wine? • --Has she made you an offer for your car? • --He never made me an apology. • 5. Transformation and expansion of basic clause types • 1) basic clause types statement • affirmative -> negative • active-> passive • 2) Expansion of basic clause types • Compound sentence (coordination: linked by coordinators such as: and, but, so, however, therefore, or ) • -- I don’t like her but John likes her very much • 2 Complex sentence (by means of adding modifiers or subordinate clauses.) • --Standing in front of the mirror, Jim looked at his image, wondering at the big change that had come over him in recent years. • Compound-complex sentence (by means of the combination of coordination and subordination.) • eg: • --The policeman looked at me suspiciously, and he asked me what I wanted.