Structure of-predication- Edwin Sulispriyanto

Post on 21-May-2015

314 views 0 download

Tags:

description

Syntax of Predication works on all favorite learning of syntax

Transcript of Structure of-predication- Edwin Sulispriyanto

Structure of Predication

Meeting 5

General understanding

Predicate is constituent

It can be as below :

Structure of Modification P

Structure of Complementation P

Structure of Coordination P

• The subject and predicate can be either of the following:- a single word- a word with accompanying function words- a phrase, or - one of the syntactic structures: modification, complementation, or coordination

• Specifically the subject can be a structure of predication also which is defined as included clause.

• The predicate consists of a verb and a verb phrase in key position. Examples:- Money P talks

- Courtesy always >> pays P

- [The sun] [sets] [in the west ]

• A predicate can be filled by a structure of complementation, such as:

- the snow was cold

- The clerk sold me the shirt

- My neighbor painted his house green• A predicate can also consist of a structure of

coordination, such as:

- We walked and talked

- People either like this place or hate it

• So we can temporarily conclude that: predicate has verb component in it either as a single verb though seldom or a more or less complex structure with the verb at its core or the heart of the matter.

Subject Components

• It is included the part of speech in :

a.Structure of Modification as the Subject– N >> the wind direction has blown.– V >> studying this could be interesting.– Adj >> careless to your money could be

danger.– Adv >> hopefully now was her pretending.

b. Prepositional phrase as the subject• At the up hill was where he lives• In Indonesia is where I live

c. Structure of complementation as the subject• To drive the long way spends plenty of money• Solving unpredictable problem is always a part of education

d. Structure of coordination as the subject• Kill and clean corruptorscorruptors are the work of inquisition

order• Capable or incapable in studying physics depend on

analyzing comprehension

e. Structure of predication as the subject• Whatever is is right

• That he did it all has not been proved

• But he No longer can survive is the best alibi

f. Nominative case • They have been seen

• They and I came together

• Who will volunteer for the job

Catatan

Concord = bentuk kesesuaian antara subjek dan objek

There is a joker in a stage

There were three kings

There comes the sun

Struture of Predication VERB forms

• Thus it needs to be clearly known that VERB is classified into seven heads:- person- tense- phase- aspect- mode- voice, and - status

• In terms of person, verb can be classified in common and third singular. Examples: the man walks, he feels, this looks good, the tall man in the car drives, eating candy causes tooth decay, what I want costs money, either his mistakes or his bad luck keeps him poor.

• In terms of Tense, there are two tenses: common (present) and past (preterit). They are shown by the inflexion attached to the verbs: Common: base / base + (-s), while Past: (base + (-ed).

• The be has its exceptional forms (is, am, are: present and was, were: past)

• In terms of Phase, there are two phases: simple and perfect (have + past participle verb). Examples:

- I speak vs I have spoken

- We work vs We have worked

• In terms of Aspect, there are three:

- simple: the verb is unmarked

- durative: be + base+ing

- inchoative: get+ present participle

• In terms of Mode, it can be seen from:

- the modal auxiliaries + base form: must go, may come, should see,etc., and

- certain other auxiliaries + infinitive (to+base form): used to study, ought to come, have to go, etc.

• In terms of Voice, there are two voices: Active and passive voices. Passive is formed by the aux. be + past participle verb or get+ past participle verb.

Examples:- He kills he is killed/He gets killed

- They built a house A house was built

- We have done the work The work has been done

• Can you analyze these two?

- The man was informed by his wife

- The man was informed about politics

• In terms of status, verbs has four statues: affirmative, interrogative, negative, and negative interrogative. Examples:

- He is working He works

- He is not working He does not work

- Is he working? Does he work?

- Isn’t he working? Doesn’t he work?

• What’s the difference between

Doesn’t he work? And

Does he not work?

Functions in the Verb Phrase (VP)

• Head: V

• Dependents:– Pre-head modifier: AdvP– Post-head modifier: AdvP/PP– (Post-head) complement:

NP/PP/AdvP/clause

S

Subject:NP Tense:AUX Predicate:VP

The boy has run very quickly

head:V PtHdMod:AdvP

S

Subject:NP Tense:AUX Predicate:VP

The boy has very quickly run

PrHdMod:AdvP V

Types of Complement in the VP• Direct Object: NP

• Indirect Object: NP

• Prepositional Phrase Complement (PPC): PP

• Subject Predicative Complement (PCS): NP/AdjP

• Object Predicative Complement (PCO): NP/AdjP

Post-head modifiers in VP are often referred to as adjuncts

Direct Object (DO) Function in VP

• The direct object function is filled by NP

– The dogs chased the cats.

• If the direct object is a pronoun, the pronoun is in Accusative case form.

– The dogs chased them. (*they)

• In basic sentences, the direct object NP comes immediately after the verb

– *The dogs chased [quickly] them.

• Exception: if there is also an indirect object NP

– The boy bought [the girl] an icecream.

Unlike PP complements in NPs and AdjPs the direct object (DO) NP is usually obligatory in English

The boy discovered the treasure.

The boy discovered it.

*The boy discovered.

The discovery of the treasure

The discovery

Indirect Object (IO) function in VP

• Indirect object (IO) function is only filled by NP

• IO follows V and precedes DO

– I gave my brother [a new bicycle].

• The IO pronoun is Accusative (or Reflexive)Accusative IO I baked him a cakeReflexive IO I baked myself a cake

Preposition Phrase Complement in VP (PPC)

• a PP may fill a complement function in a VP• It may be the only complement

– John relies on his friend.

• It may follow an NP (DO) complement– John put [the book] on the table.

• As with PP complements in an NP or AdjP, the choice of preposition is restricted by the verb.– relies on/*in/*from; believes in/*on/*about

Subjective Predicative Complement (PCS)

• PCS is filled by NP or by AdjP• PCS comes directly after the verb• The PCS describes an attribute or property of the

referent of the subject NP

Compare:– The man saw a doctor. (DO)– The man became a doctor. (PCS)

– *The man saw very clever. (DO)– The man became very clever. (PCS)

Another property of PCS

• If the PCS is a NP, it normally agrees with the subject NPThe gentleman is a lawyer.The gentlemen are lawyers.*The gentleman is lawyers.*The gentlemen are a lawyer.

• Only a limited set of verbs take an NP as PCS:– be, become, seem, look, resemble...

Tests to distinguish PCS from DO

Test 1 - SubstitutionMarjorie looked a fright.

• PCS can be NP or AdjP. • DO can only be NP.

Can you replace the NP with an AdjP?Marjorie looked frightful /angry /very sad.

Therefore - PCS.

Tests to distinguish PCS from DO

Test 2 - AgreementThe doctor seems a nice man.

• PCS must agree with the subject.• DO does not agree with the subject

The doctor saw a nice man/nice men.

Can you make the NP plural?*The doctor seems nice men.

Therefore - PCS.

Objective Predicative Complement (PCO)

• Similar to PCS in many respects, but a PCO describes an attribute of the DO of a sentence. We consider him our leader.Subj Verb DO PCO

• The PCO function is filled by NP or AdjP.– We consider him very trustworthy.

• An NP in the PCO function agrees in number with the DO phrase.– We consider them our leaders.

Distinguish PCO construction from IO construction

• VP V NP NPWe consider him our leader. (DO PCO)

We gave him our leader. (IO DO)

• Substitute AdjP for NP if PCO• We consider him very stong.

• Cannot substitute AdjP for NP if DO• *We gave him very strong.

Distinguish PCO construction from IO construction

• VP V NP NPWe consider him our leader. (DO PCO)

We gave him our leader. (IO DO)

• DO NP and PCO NP agree in number• We consider him our leader. (singular)• We consider them our leaders. (plural)

• No number agreement between IO and DO• We gave him our leader/leaders.• We gave them our leader/leaders.

• Post-head dependents which are not complements in a

VP are adjuncts

• Adjuncts are never obligatory

• Adjuncts modify some aspect of the possible reference

of the VP

• Different types of phrases can act as an adjunct in a

VP (XP is an abbreviation for an unspecified type of

phrase)

• Adjuncts can be fronted to pre-Subject

Adjuncts

I left very quickly. (AdvP)

I left.

Very quickly I left.

I saw John on Tuesday. (PP)

I saw John.

On Tuesday I saw John.

Mary left the following day. (NP)

Mary left.

The following day Mary left.

Multiple adjuncts

Sue slept very badly in the plane on Tuesday after the meeting

I behave very badly. (COMP:AdvP)*I behave ___. (incomplete - opposite meaning)

I put John on the ground. (COMP:PP)*I put John ___.

Mary left her bag. (COMP:NP)*Mary left ____.

Santa depends on Rudolph. (COMP:PP)*Santa depends ___.

Complements cannot be omitted (except in special cases)

Complements precede adjuncts John read [the book] carefully/in the lounge

*John read carefully/in the lounge [the book].

Exception: 'Heavy' DO NP may follow an adjunct phrase

John examined (very) carefully [every single document in the safe].

Summary

Every phrase has a head

A phrase may have dependents

Dependents may precede or follow the head

Dependents with a close semantic and syntactic relationship with the head are complements

In some phrases (e.g., VP) complements may be obligatory

Dependents which are freely added to a phrase to modify the head are adjuncts

End of slides