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THE SENTENCE
§ 1. Anything that is said in the act of communication is called an utterance. Most utterances are sentences, although there are some which are not sentences and are called non-sentence utterances. Thus utterances fall into two groups: sentences and non-sentence utterances.
Sentences may be regarded from the point of view of their structure and their communicative value.
Structural classification of sentences
§ 2. From the point of view of their structure, sentences can be:
1. Simple or composite (compound and complex).
2. Complete or incomplete (elliptical).
3. Two-member (double-nucleus) or one-member (single-nucleus).
These three classifications are based on different approaches to the structural organization of sentences and reflect its different aspects.
The difference between the simple sentence and the composite sentence lies in the fact that the former contains only one subject-predicate unit and the latter more than one. Subject-predicate units that form composite sentences are called clauses.
Honesty is the best policy. (one subject-predicate unit)
You never know what you can do till you try. (three subject-predicate units, or three clauses)
Complete and incomplete (or elliptical) sentences are distinguished by the presence or absence of word-forms in the principal positions of two-member sentences.
In a complete sentence both the principal positions are filled with word-forms. When did you arrive? I came straight here.
In an incomplete (elliptical) sentence one or both of the main positions are not filled, but can be easily supplied as it is clear from the context what is missing.
Cheerful, aren’t you? - Ready? - Wrong again.
Elliptical sentences are typical of conversational English.
One-member and two-member sentences are distinguished by the number of principal parts (positions) they contain: two-member sentences have two main parts - the subject and the predicate, while one-member sentences have only one principal part, which is neither the subject nor the predicate. Two-member sentences: The magpie (сорока) flew off. We are going to my house now. One-member sentences: An old park. Midsummer.
THE SIMPLE SENTENCE
Two-member sentences
§ 3. The basic pattern of a simple sentence in English is one subject-predicate unit, that is, it has two main (principal) positions: those of the subject and of the predicate. It is the pattern of a two-member sentence. There are several variations of this basic pattern, depending mainly on the kind of verb occupying the predicate position. The verb in the predicate position may be intransitive, transitive, ditransitive or a link verb.
Here are the main variants of the fundamental (basic) pattern:
1. John ran.
2. John is a student.
3. John is clever.
4. John learned French.
5. John gives Mary his books.
6. John | in London. lives there |
7. We found John guilty.
8. We found John a bore.
The basic pattern may be unextended or extended.
An unextended sentence contains two main positions of the basic pattern, that of the subject and the predicate. Mary laughed. Mary is a doctor. Mary is happy.
An extended sentence may contain various optional elements (including attributes, certain kinds of prepositional objects and adverbial modifiers). My friend John is a very kind student.
Obligatory extending elements are those which complete the meaning of other words, usually verbs, or pronouns, which without them make no or little sense. Therefore obligatory elements are called complements: John learned French. (the meaning of “learned” is incomplete without the object “French”)
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