The Verb Phrase
The Verb Phrase
Budi Jayadi
Srihidayanti
AUXILIARY
FINITE
VERB
LEXICAL
VERBS
STRINGS
VERB
Verb string
No status
structurally
Lexical verb
adverbials
Time
A matter of
when events
take place
NON-PAST
Important
condition:
Negation
requires
special kind of
verbs an
operator
To be an
operator:
- Finite
- Only the
first can be
finite in a
verb string
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
Plausibilit
y
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
The
modal
will
Present
AUXILIARY VERBS
+ the tense
adverbial
Examples of the auxiliary of the perfect by
have:
this
times
The
auxiliary
Therenext
are
definite
year
=
of
the
perfect
The Simpson has delivered hip irreverence and
difference
future
have in
is
clever satire for more than ten years
now.
Past
tense
tense.
Have
is inby
bare
followed
its
The
three
infinitive
= part
It was puerile, silly and immature and
everyone
PPART
form
sentences
have
of
the
delivered,
who saw it thought it was a work of side-splitting
something
in
complement
been
and
wonder. The cult of South Park had been
born.
common
will
become
By this time next year they will have become a
ratings goldmine.
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
Speech
time and
reference
time =
now
(coincide)
Event
time =
ten years
ago up to
now
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
What can we learn from the three examples?
The sentence have something in common, E precedes R, i.e.
that the event happened (or started happening) before the
time we are focusing on.
Past tense refers to an event that happened in the past, i.e.
before now.
The confusion is between before the time we are focusing on
and before now.
The event can be in the future as long as it is before the focus
point.
AUXILIARY VERBS
What can we learn from the three examples?
Perfect aspect is a way of indicating the relation between the focus
point and the time at which the event took place.
Tense is a way indicating the relation between focus time and speech
time.
In the first sentence, focus time and speech time coincide and we get
present tense.
In the second one, focus time precedes the speech time and we get
past tense.
When the focus time is in the future, after S, we get future indication.
AUXILIARY VERBS
AUXILIARY VERBS
Passives can be used both when one wants to highlight the object,
and when one wants to put less emphasis on the subject or omit it
altogether
Example:
Manhattan has been destroyed and rebuilt.
Not all passive clauses have the be auxiliary, some contain get
instead.
Example:
I get called lots of things as a politician, so being named after a
breakfast cereal is pretty mild, really.
There is one auxiliary which doesnt seem to have much in the line of
semantics. All it seems to do is to function as the operator when
there is no other auxiliary present. This is the dummy auxiliary do.
Example:
The sloth-like Homer Simpson and his knuckel-headed mishaps
became essential viewing.
In order to turn these into interrogatives or in order to negate them
we need to insert a for of do:
Example:
Did the simpsons revolutionise cartoons?
SUMMING UP AUXILIARIES
AUXILIARY VERB
Auxiliary
Form of
complement
Contracted
form
Contracted
negated form
Core modals:
can, could,
may, might,
shall, should,
will, would,
must
V (BARE)
ll for will
d for would
cant, couldnt,
mightnt,
shant,
shouldnt,
wont,
wouldnt,
mustnt
Perfect aspect:
have
V (PPART)
Pres ve, s,
past d
havent,
hasnt, hadnt
Progressive
aspect:: be
V (ING)
Pres m, re, s
Arent, isnt,
wasnt, werent
Passive voice:
be
V (PPART)
m, re, s
Arent, isnt
wasnt werent
Dummy
auxiliary: do
V (BARE)
Dont, doesnt,
didnt
perfect
Main verb
progressi passive
ve
We
Must
We
Must
Have
We
Must
Have
Been
south must
park
have
been
Watch
south
park
Watche
d
south
park
Watchin south
g
park
being
watche
d
MONO-TRANSITIVE VERBS
Mono transitive verbs take one object, which will always be a
direct object.
Example:
The Simpsons revolutionized cartoons.
There are other verbs which seem to be followed by a
preposition phrase.
Example:
Ono generally looked at Lennon lovingly.
DI-TRANSITIVE VERBS
A di-transitive verb takes two objects, a direct object and an indirect
one. The indirect object always precedes the direct one.
Example:
Baker gives the novel a real sense of chaos.
The indirect object is really an object by creating the corresponding
passive sentences.
Example:
The novel is given a real sense of chaos by Baker.
INTENSIVE VERBS
Intensive verbs take one predicative complement and are sometimes
also referred to as copular verbs or complex intransitive.
Example:
You can get complacent.
The predicative complement of an intensive verb is a subject
complement.
The main characteristic of a predicative complement is that it refers to
the same entity as something else in the sentence, in this case the
subject.
Verb which require one object and predicative complement are called
complex transitive verbs. The object is a direct object and the
predicate complement is an object complement.
Example:
Dont call comedian Alex Boardman a bit of a lad.
Just as with the subject complement of some verbs, we will claim that
the object complement can also be a PP.
Example:
Thatcherism drove many radical young English people into exile.
The first element following the verb is clearly an object since we can make it a
passive sentence in which it is the subject.
Example:
Many radical young English people were driven into exile by Thatcherism.
This sentence may be grammatical, but with a very different meaning.
Thatcherism drove many radical young English people
Compare it with one that clearly contains an optional adjunct.
Margaret drove the car into town.
There is example of what look like clausal object complements:
I found myself asking many of questions.
TREES
The auxiliaries can be said to put the following restrictions on
their VP complements:
Modals
be + V (ING)
be + V (PPART)
POINTS TO REMEMBER
Auxiliary verbs are verbs with functional rather than lexical content.
They take a VP complement and each auxiliary verb requires that
complement to have a particular form. Auxiliary verbs can function
as operators in the formation of yesno-interrogatives (by inverting
with the subject) and sentence negation.
Modal verbs combine with BARE infinitive VPs and have quite
complex semantics.
There are two aspects in English: perfect and progressive. The
auxiliary of the perfect have requires its VP complement to occur in
its PPART form and the auxiliary of the progressive be combines with
a VP in its -ing form.
POINTS TO REMEMBER
The passive auxiliary be takes a PPART VP complement and
indicates passive voice.
When an operator is required and no other auxiliary is
available, the dummy auxiliary do is used. It combines with a
VP in its BARE form.
Many auxiliary verbs have abbreviated forms which can attach
to certain subjects. They also have special negative forms, with
nt attached. In some cases the auxiliary with the contracted
negation has a different interpretation from the one with the
independent negation.
POINTS TO REMEMBER
It is important to keep time and tense separate. Time is
something in the real world that we think of as having a past, a
present and a future. Tense, on the other hand, is a verb form.
In English, there are two tenses, present (or non-past) and
past. Present tense can be marked to refer to both past and
future time. In fact, the use of the simple present tense to refer
to present time is relatively rare in English. Past tense can also
be used to refer to the future. There is no future tense in
English but many different ways of referring to future time.
Lexical verbs can be subdivided according to the complements
they require: intransitive, mono-transitive, di-transitive,
intensive and complex transitive. Cutting across these
POINTS TO REMEMBER
Apart from the auxiliary verbs have, be and do, there are also
three lexical verbs have, be and do. Lexical have, and even
more so the lexical be, retain auxiliary-like properties even
when functioning as lexical verbs.