Structure of-predication- Edwin Sulispriyanto

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Structure of Predication Meeting 5

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Syntax of Predication works on all favorite learning of syntax

Transcript of Structure of-predication- Edwin Sulispriyanto

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Structure of Predication

Meeting 5

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General understanding

Predicate is constituent

It can be as below :

Structure of Modification P

Structure of Complementation P

Structure of Coordination P

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• 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

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• 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 ]

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• 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

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• 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.

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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.

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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

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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

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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

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• 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.

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• 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)

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• 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

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• In terms of Aspect, there are three:

- simple: the verb is unmarked

- durative: be + base+ing

- inchoative: get+ present participle

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• 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.

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• 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

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• Can you analyze these two?

- The man was informed by his wife

- The man was informed about politics

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• 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?

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• What’s the difference between

Doesn’t he work? And

Does he not work?

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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

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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

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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

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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.

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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

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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

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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

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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)

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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...

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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• 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

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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

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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)

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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].

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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

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End of slides