Grammar 101 Notes
Grammar 101 Notes
Grammar 101 Notes
Conjunctions Links
NOUN PHRASE: determiner + premodifier + head+ postmodifier
CONNECTOR (c)
1. One-place verb
a. Intransitive: SV (e.g. to leave)
2. Two-place verb
a. Monotransitive: SVdO
b. Copular: SVsP (e.g. be, become, seem)
c. Intransitive verb with obligatory adverbial: SVA (e.g. be, live)
3. Three-place verb
a. Ditransitive: SViOdO
b. Complex: SVdOoP
c. Monotransitive verb with obligatory adverbial: SVdOA
Types of nouns
- Countable
- Uncountable
- Unit noun
- Collective noun: unit vs. distributive
- Group noun
- Proper noun
- Apposition
- ‘s genitive
- Of genitive
Indefinite article A
Zero article Ø
s-genitive Mary’s
PRONOUNS
Reflexive myself
Indefinite pronouns:
Number: singular, plural (e.g. one, each vs. some, many)
Personal vs. non-personal reference (someone vs. something)
Reflexive Pronouns: Person, number and gender
SOME ANY
✦ Limitation ✧ Non-limitation
✦ Particularity ✧ Arbitrariness
✦ Frequently carry implications of ✧ Existence may be denied or left
existence open
✦ Typically used in assertive ✧ Typically used in questions,
contexts. negative contexts and
✦ Can be used in non-assertive conditional clauses
contexts to signal that limitation, ✧ Can be used in assertive
particularity and existence is contexts to signal arbitrariness
assumed. (‘no matter what/who/which’)
LEXICAL VERB
Aspect: an indicator of how an action is viewed –from the inside or from the
outside –as unfolding or as completed. Important keywords are duration and
completion.
Voice: the distinction between active and passive –whether the subject referent
performs/causes an action (active) or is affected by the action (passive).
MODALITY
a) Root modality
ABILITY(can/could)
PERMISSION(can/could, may/might)
OBLIGATION(must, ought to, shall/should)
VOLITION(will/would)
POSSIBILITY(may/might)
PREDICTION(will/shall)
HABITUAL ACTIVITY(will/would)
MOOD
The imperative has you as implied subject, which is only sometimes overtly
expressed:
Turn it down! You turn it down! Don’t (you) turn it down!
The subjunctive is visible only in the third person singular (lack of s-form) and
when the verb is BE. It is rare, but used in:
FUTURE-REFERRING EXPRESSIONS
ADVERBIALS
REALIZATION OF ADVERBIALS
○ Adverb
○ Adverb Phrase
○ Noun Phrase
○ Prepositional Phrase
○ Finite Subordinate Clause
○ Non-finite Subordinate Clause
○ Verbless Clause
ADJUNCTS
- Time - Place - Manner
- Instrument - Reason - Focus
- Means - Purpose - Viewpoint
- Degree - Condition - Respect
- Participant - Concession
DISJUNCTS
a) Modal
b) Fact-evaluating
c) Style-evaluating
d) Subject-evaluating
e) Sentential relative clause
CONJUNCTS: Link
PLACEMENT
1. Initial (before subject)
2. Medial (between subject and last obligatory component)
3. End (after last obligatory component)
RELATIVE PRONOUNS
who perso S, O, P
NOMINAL CLAUSES
f. That-clauses
i. ‘That’ or Ø
g. Nominal relative clauses
i. Wh-pronouns
ii. No antecedent, wh-word functions as antecedent
h. Indirect question
i. Interrogative pronouns and adverbs
ii. Conjunctions ‘if’ or ‘whether’
i. Other
i. Cleft clauses
ii. Indirect speech
iii. Comment clauses
NON-FINITE CLAUSES
Verbless
When the non-finite clause is an object or adverbial, its subject is the same as in
the superordinate clause.
In -ing clauses the subject can be either in the object form or in the possessive
form.
Possessive form more focus on the action (also: more formal choice, less used)
Objects form more focus on the person who is doing the action.
Some verbs allow only the object form: keep, have, get, leave, find, want,and many
perception verbs.