Top Banner
KINDS OF KINDS OF CLAUSES CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE
33

KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Dec 23, 2015

Download

Documents

Jeremy Garrett
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

KINDS OF KINDS OF CLAUSESCLAUSES

KINDS OF KINDS OF CLAUSESCLAUSES

RECOGNITION PRACTICE

Page 2: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

IDENTIFYIDENTIFY

Page 3: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

MAJOR OR MINOR CLAUSES

Page 4: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

SINGLE INDEPENDENTDEPENDENT IN A PARATACTIC

ORHYPOTACTIC CLAUSE COMPLEX

Page 5: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

FINITEOR

NON-FINITE

Page 6: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

ELLIPTICALOR

EMBEDDED

Page 7: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

EMBEDDEDPLUS

FUNCTION

Page 8: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

William had just gone away to London, and his mother missed his money.

Page 9: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Two paratactically related clauses

Page 10: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

There is no significant difference in the ideational content of these two utterances.

Page 11: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause

Page 12: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

What a nice plant!

Page 13: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

MINOR CLAUSE

Page 14: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

If you want to learn it, you must begin.

Page 15: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Hypotactic clause complex

Clause 1 dependent, Clause 2 independent

Page 16: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

It is clear [[ that

there is always a

difference]].

Page 17: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause, with Finite clause introduced by “that” as real postponed Subject. This is a case of anticipatory “it”

Page 18: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Mrs Morel talked again to Paul, who was helping her with her housework.

Page 19: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Hypotactic Clause Complex, with Clause 1 as main clause and Clause 2 as dependent clause of elaboration.

Page 20: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Do you enjoy [[making sounds]]?

Page 21: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause with

embedded clause as C =

DO

Page 22: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

At Christmas, people buy their kids more gaming, entertainment-based items.

Page 23: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause

Page 24: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

[[What is beautiful]] is also in some respects ugly.

Page 25: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause with embedded finite clause as Subject

Page 26: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

They took [[what they wanted]].

Page 27: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause with

embedded clause as C

= DO

Page 28: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Throw it away or give it to your sister.

Page 29: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Paractactic clause complex

Page 30: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Not any more.

Page 31: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Elliptical (recoverable from

context)

Page 32: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

It isn’t surprising [[that Aristotle appealed to such principles]].

Page 33: KINDS OF CLAUSES KINDS OF CLAUSES RECOGNITION PRACTICE.

Single clause with embedded “that finite clause” as Subject, real postponed Subject. The clause has anticipatory “it”