A Short Overview of English Syntax
A Short Overview of English Syntax
A Short Overview of English Syntax
Rodney Huddleston
The University of Queensland
This paper presents a brief account of English syntax based on The Cambridge Grammar of the
English Language,[1] providing an overview of the main constructions and categories in the
language. The present version is intended primarily for members of the English Teachers'
Association of Queensland (ETAQ), offering an alternative approach to that presented in the 2007
volume of their journalWords`Worth by Lenore Ferguson under the title `Grammar at the Coalface' -
in particular the articles `The structural basics' (March 2007) and `Functional elements in a clause'
(June 2007). I make use of concepts discussed in my own Words'Worth paper `Aspects of
grammar: functions, complements and inflection' (March 2008), and take over Functional
Grammar's useful convention of distinguishing between functions and classes by using an initial
capital letter for the former: thus Subject is the name of a function, noun phrase the name of a
class.
Note that such an example as We stayed at the hotel which you recommended is also a clausal
sentence even though it contains two clauses. This is because one clause, which you
recommended, ispart of the other, rather than separate from it (more specifically, the which you
recommended is part of the noun phrase the hotel which you recommended); the larger clause is
thus We stayed at the hotelwhich you recommended, and this does constitute the whole sentence,
like that in [i].
The fact that the two types of sentence are distinguished in terms of clauses implies that we
take the clause to be a more basic unit than the sentence, which reflects the fact that in speech it
tends to be more difficult to determine the boundaries between sentences than the boundaries
between clauses. For most of this overview we will focus on clauses: we return to coordination in
Section14.
There are two further points that should be made at this point.
(a) In all the above examples the non-canonical clauses differ in their structure from canonical
clauses, but this is not always so. In [iiib] the subordinate clause is introduced by that but we could
omit this, giving She said they knew the victim, where the underlined clause is identical with [iiia];
nevertheless it is still subordinate and hence non-canonical. It is subordinate by virtue of being
Complement of the verb said, but the subordination happens not to be marked in the internal
grammatical structure of the clause itself.
(b) A clause is non-canonical if it lacks at least one of the above properties. It may of course lack
more than one of them. Thus Wasn't the key taken by the secretary? has three non-canonical
properties: it is negative, interrogative and passive. In the discussion below we will take the non-
canonical properties in turn with the understanding that they can combine.
Note that we use `determinative' as the name of a class and `Determiner' as the name of a function;
[2]
we need to invoke the class vs function distinction here to cater for the construction illustrated
in the doctor's car. Here the doctor's has the same function, Determiner, as the in the car, but it is
not a word and hence not a determinative: as far as its class is concerned it's a noun phrase.
The above scheme differs from that of traditional grammar in three respects:
o We take pronouns to be a subclass of nouns, not a distinct primary class.
o Traditional grammars generally take our determinatives to be a subclass of adjectives, though
some recognise a class of articles consisting of the and a. Our determinative class is much
larger, containing not just the and a, but also words like some, any, all, each, every, no, etc.;
these are very different from words like those underlined in [iii].
o We have coordinator and subordinator as distinct primary classes, whereas traditional
grammar has a primary class of conjunctions subdivided into coordinating and subordinating
conjunctions.
4 PHRASES
For each of the first six of the word classes in [3] there is a corresponding class of phrases whose
Head belongs to that class. In the following examples, the phrase is enclosed in brackets and the
Head underlined:
[4] i Verb phrase She [wrote some letters]. He [is still in London].
ii Noun phrase [The new lodger] is here. [The boss] wants to see [you].
iii Adjective phrase It's getting [rather late]. I'm [glad you could come].
iv Adverb phrase I spoke [too soon]. It's [quite extraordinarily] good.
v Determinative phrase I saw [almost every] card. We've [very little] money left.
vi Preposition phrase They're [in the garden]. He wrote a book [on sharks].
In canonical clauses describing an action the Subject will be associated with the semantic role of
actor, or agent, as in [5i]. But many clauses don't express actions: we heard an explosion, for
example, describes a sensory experience, and here the Subject is associated with the role of
experiencer. There are numerous different kinds of semantic role that can be associated with the
Subject: what the role is in a particular instance will depend on the meaning of the clause,
especially of the verb.
Meaning therefore does not provide a reliable way of identifying the Subject. But this function
has a good few distinctive grammatical properties which together generally make it easy to identify.
Here are some of them.
(a) Position. Its default position - the one it occupies unless there are special reasons for placing it
elsewhere - is before the Predicate.
(b) Formation of interrogatives. You can generally change a declarative clause into an interrogative
by inverting the Subject with the first auxiliary verb; if there is no auxiliary in the declarative you
need to insert the appropriate form of do.[3] In either case the Subject ends up following the auxiliary
verb:
(c) Interrogative tags. To seek confirmation of a statement you can add an interrogative tag,
consisting of an auxiliary verb and a personal pronoun Subject which relates back to the Subject of
the clause to which the tag is attached: The boss is in her office, isn't she?; Everyone signed the
petition, didn't they?
(d) Subject-verb agreement, Where the verb has person-number properties (in the present tense
and the past tense of be), they are normally determined by agreement with the Subject:
[7] a. Her son plays the piano. b. Her sons play the piano.
5.2 Predicator, Complements and Adjuncts
At the next layer of structure below the Predicate we distinguish three functions. The Predicator is
the function filled by the verb. The verb is the Head of the verb phrase, and Predicator is the special
term used for the Head of the verb phrase forming the Predicate of a clause. Thus in [7b] play the
piano is a verb phrase functioning as Predicate while play is a verb functioning as Predicator.
Complement and Adjunct are different kinds of Dependent, distinguished by
the licensing condition. Complements can occur only if they are licensed by the Head verb: the
verb must belong to a subclass that permits (or requires) a Complement of the type in question.
Adjuncts are not subject to this restriction. Compare:
Here the lawn is admissible because the verb mow (unlike disappear, for example) allows a
Dependent of this kind, so the lawn is a Complement. But a Dependent indicating time can occur
with any verb, so before it started to rain is an Adjunct.
We will look further at Complements in the next subsection. As for Adjuncts, they are usually
realised by adverb phrases, preposition phrases, subordinate clauses, or a very narrow range of
noun phrases. They can be divided into various semantic subtypes, such as Adjuncts of time, place,
manner, etc., as illustrated in [9]:
While thousands of verbs license an Object, only a fairly small number license a Predicative
Complement, and of these be is by far the most common: others
include become, remain, appear, seem, etc. The term `Predicative Complement' is most easily
understood by reference to the construction with be: the verb has little meaning here (it is often
called just a `linking verb'), so that the main semantic content of the Predicate is expressed by the
Complement.
There are several grammatical properties that distinguish Objects from Predicative
Complements, of which the two most important ones are illustrated in [11]:
[11] i a. Ed blamed the minister. [Object] b. The minister was blamed by Ed.
ii a. Ed was a minister. [Pred Comp] b. *A minister was been by Ed.
iii a. Ed was innocent. [Pred Comp] b. *Ed blamed innocent.
o The Object of an active clause can usually become the Subject of a corresponding passive
clause, but a Predicative Complement never can. Thus the Object of active [ia] corresponds
to the Subject of passive [ib], whereas [iib] is not a possible passive version of [iia]. (Here and
below the asterisk indicates that what follows is ungrammatical.)
o A Predicative Complement can be realised not only by a noun phrase, as in [iia], but also by
an adjective phrase, as in [iiia], whereas an Object cannot be realised by an adjective phrase,
as evident from the ungrammaticality of [iiib].
[12] i He gave the prisoner some water. [Indirect Object (recipient) + Direct Object]
ii She baked me a cake. [Indirect Object (beneficiary) + Direct Object]
In the representations of the structures, S stands for Subject, P for Predicator, PC s for Subjective
Predicative Complement, Od for Direct Object, PCo for Objective Predicative Complement, and
Oi for Indirect Object. The names reflect the fact that there are two dimensions of contrast:
o One has to do with Objects: an intransitive clause has no Object, a monotransitive clause has
a single Object, and a ditransitive clause has two Objects.
o The other has to with Predicative Complements: if a clause contains a Predicative
Complement it is complex, otherwise ordinary, though the latter term is often omitted (as it is
in [v], since there is no possibility of adding a Predicative Complement to a ditransitive
clause).
The names apply in the first instance to the clause constructions, and then derivatively to the
verbs that appear in these constructions. Thus disappear is an (ordinary) intransitive verb, be a
complex-intransitive one, and so on. But it must be borne in mind that the majority of verbs can
appear in more than one of them, and hence belong to more than one class. Find, for example,
commonly appears in [iii] (We found the key), [iv] (We found her co-operative), and [v] (We found
her a job).
6 VERBS
6.1 Verb inflection
The most distinctive property of verbs is their inflection: they have a number of inflectional forms
that are permitted or required in various grammatical constructions. The present tense form takes,
for example, can occur as the verb of a canonical clause, whereas the past
participle taken cannot: She takes care, but not *She taken care.
The great majority of verb lexemes have six inflectional forms, as illustrated in [16]:
It will be noticed that although we have distinguished six different inflectional forms, there are only
four different shapes: checked, checks, check and checking. By `shape' we mean the spelling or
pronunciation. Thus the preterite and past participle of the lexeme check have the same shape, as
do the plain present tense and the plain form. The same applies to all other regular verbs, i.e. verbs
whose inflectional forms are determined by general rules. But there are a good number of irregular
verbs where the preterite and past participle do not have the same shape: take, for example,
has took as its preterite and taken as its past participle.
This means that it is very easy to decide whether any particular instance of the
shape check is a preterite form or a past participle. What you need to do is ask which form of a verb
like take would be needed in the construction in question. Consider, then, the following examples:
If we substitute take for check in [i] the form we need is the past participle taken: She may
have taken a break. So this checked is likewise a past participle. And if we make the substitution in
[ii] we need the preterite form took: I'm not sure whether she took a break or not. So the checked of
[ii] is the preterite form. Note that when making the substitution you need to keep constant what
precedes the verb (e.g. She may have in [i]) since this is what determines the inflection that is
required: what follows the verb is irrelevant and hence can be changed to suit the verb you are
substituting.
Let us now briefly review the six forms.
(a) Preterite. This is a type of past tense: the type where the past tense is marked inflectionally
rather than by means of an auxiliary verb. Many grammars use the more general term `past tense':
we prefer the more specific term to distinguish it from the construction where the
auxiliary have marks the other kind of past tense, as in She has checked the proofs.
(b)-(c) The present tense forms. There are two present tense forms, one which occurs with a 3rd
person singular subject, and one which occurs with any other subject: 1st person (I check), 2nd
person (you check) or plural (they check). We could call this latter form `non-3rd person singular',
but `plain present' is simpler. `Plain' indicates that it is identical with the morphological base of the
lexeme, i.e. the starting-point for the rules that produce the various inflectional forms by adding a
suffix, changing the vowel, and so on.
(d) The plain form. This is also identical with the base, but it is not a present tense form. It is used in
three constructions:
The infinitival construction is very often marked by to, but it is also found without to after such verbs
as can, may, will, do (She didn't check the figures herself), make (They made me check the
figures myself), etc. The subjunctive is much the least frequent of the three constructions and
belongs to somewhat formal style.
There are two major factors that distinguish the plain form from the plain present:
o The verb be is highly exceptional in its inflection in that it has three present tense forms
instead of the usual two (is, am, are) and all of these are different in shape from the plain
form be. It's the latter form that appears in the three constructions shown in
[18]: Be quiet (imperative); It's better to be safe than sorry, I will be ready in
time (infinitival); It's essential that she be told (subjunctive). So we can tell whether a given
instance of check, say, is the plain present or the plain form by using the substitution test
illustrated above, but this time substituting the verb be. Thus the check of We must check the
figures is a plain form, not a plain present tense because we need the plain form of be in this
position: We must be careful.
o The plain present doesn't occur with 3rd person singular Subjects, but the plain form does.
Compare She checks the figures herself (not *She check the figures herself) and She
will check the figures herself (not *She will checks the figures herself).
(e) The gerund-participle. This form always ends with the suffix @ing. Traditional grammar
distinguishes two forms with this suffix, the gerund and the present participle:
The idea was that a gerund is comparable to a noun, while a participle is comparable to an
adjective. Thus in [i] checking the figures is comparable to such checks, where checks is a noun; in
[ii] checking the figures is Modifier to people and was therefore considered adjective-like since the
most common type of Modifier to a noun is an adjective. [4] There is, however, no verb in English that
has distinct forms for the constructions in [19], and so there is no basis for making any inflectional
distinction here in Present-day English: we thus have a single form and the name `gerund-participle'
indicates that it covers both traditional categories.
(f) The past participle. This is used in two main constructions, the perfect and the passive:
The perfect is a past tense marked by the auxiliary verb have, while the most straightforward cases
of the passive involve the auxiliary verb be. We retain the traditional term `past participle', though
the `past' component of meaning applies just to the perfect construction.
6.2 The inflectional tense system
We have seen that there are two inflectional tenses in English: preterite and present; we review now
the major uses of these tenses.
o In [i] we see the basic use, indicating past time. The event of his arriving took place in the
past, and the state of her knowing him well obtained in the past (it may still obtain now, but I'm
talking about some time in the past). This is much the most frequent use, but it's important to
be aware that the preterite doesn't always have this meaning.
o Example [iia] could be used to report Ed's saying `I am ill': present tense am is shifted back to
preterite was under the influence of the preterite reporting verb said. In [iib] my original
thought was `It starts tomorrow': again present tense starts is shifted back to preterite started.
This example shows very clearly that the backshift use is not the same as the past time use,
for clearly the starting is not in the past.
o In [iii] the preterite has a modal rather than temporal meaning: it has to do with factuality, not
time. In [iiia] the subordinate clause has a counterfactual meaning under the influence of wish:
you understand that I don't know the answer. The time is present, not past: I don't know it
now. The conditional [iiib] is not counterfactual (it doesn't rule out the possibility of your paying
me), but it envisages your paying me as a somewhat remote possibility - rather less likely
than with the present tense counterpart I'll do it if you pay me. Note that the time of your
possibly paying me is in the future. We use the term `modal remoteness' to cover both these
interpretations (as well as others mentioned briefly in Section6.5).
(b) The present tense. The two most important uses are seen in [22]:
[22] i Present time a. I promise I'll help you. b. She lives in Sydney.
ii Future time a. Exams start next week. b. I'll go home when it gets dark.
o In [i] we again have the basic and much the most common use: to indicate present time. In [ia]
the event of my promising is actually simultaneous with the utterance, for I perform the act of
promising by saying this sentence. In [ib] we have a state, and the present tense indicates
that the state obtains at the time of speaking.
o In [ii] the time is future. In main clauses this is possible only when the event is in some way
already scheduled, as in [iia]. But this constraint does not apply in various kinds of
subordinate clause such as we have in [iib].
[23] i Modal auxiliaries can, may, must, will, shall, ought, need, dare
ii Non-modal auxiliaries be, have, do
(Could, might, would and should are the preterite forms of can, may, will and shall respectively,
though they differ considerably from other preterites, as we shall see.)
(a) Subject-auxiliary inversion. We have seen that in canonical clauses the Subject precedes the
verb whereas in most interrogative main clauses the Subject follows the (first) verb. The verb that
precedes the Subject, however, must be an auxiliary verb: only auxiliaries can invert with the
Subject. Compare:
If the declarative doesn't contain an auxiliary, as in [ib], it is necessary to insert the auxiliary do so
that inversion can apply: Did she take the car? This do has no meaning: it is simply inserted to
satisfy the grammatical rule requiring an auxiliary.
(b) Negation. The construction where not is used to negate the verb likewise requires that the verb
be an auxiliary:
Again, if there is no auxiliary in the positive, do must be inserted to form the negative: She did not
take the car.
A further, related, point is that auxiliaries, but not lexical verbs, have negative forms ending in
the suffix n't: a more informal variant of [25iia] is She hasn't taken the car.
The particular type of non-finite clause that is used depends on the Head verb, whether auxiliary or
lexical. Ought and intend license infinitivals with to, can and help infinitivals without to; be, in one
of its uses, and begin license a non-finite clause with a gerund-participle form of the verb; be, in a
second use, and get license one with a past participle form of the verb.
Note, then, that the verb phrase in [iiia], say, is divided into was + checking the figures,
not was checking + the figures, just as that in [iiib] is divided into began + checking the figures,
not began checking + the figures. And similarly with the other examples.
[27] i Progressive marker a. They are watching TV. b. I've been working all morning.
ii Passive marker a. It was taken by Jill. b. He may be arrested.
iii Copula a. She was a friend of his. b. That is very likely.
(b) Have. This verb belongs to both lexical and auxiliary classes. In She had a swim it is a lexical
verb, for the interrogative and negative counterparts are Did she have a swim? and She didn't have
a swim. The auxiliary uses are seen in [28]:
[28] i Perfect marker a. He has broken his leg. b. He may have taken it yesterday.
ii Static have a. She has enough credit. b. We have to invite them all.
o The perfect is marked by auxiliary have + a past participle. It is best regarded as a secondary
past tense - the primary past tense being the inflectional preterite. Note, for example, that the
preterite is found only in finite constructions such as He took it yesterday, so it can't occur
after may (cf. *He may took it yesterday: may takes an infinitival clause as Complement), and
perfect have is then used instead, as in [ib]. Since have itself can inflect for tense, [ia] is
doubly marked for tense: it is `past in present', the past being marked by the
lexeme have and the present by the inflection onhave. This reflects the fact that while the
event of his breaking his leg is located in past time it is seen as having relevance to the
present. The most likely scenario is that his leg has not yet healed, so that he is at present
incapacitated. The present tense component also explains why it is not normally possible to
add an Adjunct like yesterday: *He has broken his leg yesterday.
o Have in [ii] denotes a state, unlike that of the above She had a swim, which is dynamic,
denoting an event. Usage is divided as to whether static have is an auxiliary or a lexical verb.
Those who sayShe hasn't enough credit or Have we to invite them all? and the like are
treating it as an auxiliary, while those who say She doesn't have enough credit or Do we have
to invite them all? are treating it as a lexical verb. Many people use both constructions, though
the lexical verb treatment has been gaining ground for some time. Note that in [iia] have,
like be in [27], doesn't have a non-finite clause as Complement.
Note that although We have to invite them all has essentially the same meaning as We must invite
them all, this have is not a modal auxiliary: it has none of the above three grammatical properties. It
is a special case of the static have, illustrated in [28ii], and as such it is for many speakers not an
auxiliary at all, but a lexical verb.
(c) The preterite forms. Could, might, would and should are the preterite forms
of can, may, will and shall respectively, but the use of these preterites differs from that of other
preterite forms in Present-day English.
o Only could and would have the basic preterite use of indicating past time: I could do it easily
when I was younger; I asked him to help but he wouldn't.
o The status of might and should as preterites is established by their use in certain conditional
constructions and in those cases of reported speech or thought where present tense forms
are excluded. Thus though we can have may in If you come back tomorrow you may find him
in, we need might in If you came back tomorrow you might find him in.[5] And if at some time in
the past I had the thought `I shall easily finish before she returns' I would report this
with should, as in I knew I should easily finish before she returned (not *shall).
o The major difference is that while with other verbs the modal remoteness use of the preterite
is restricted to certain kinds of subordinate clause, with the modal auxiliaries it occurs in main
clauses and with a wider range of interpretation; with might and should it is overwhelmingly
the most frequent use. The preterites tend to be weaker, more tentative or polite than the
present tense forms.
(d) Types of modal meaning. The modal auxiliaries express a considerable variety of meanings, but
they can be grouped into three major types.
o Epistemic modality. Here we are concerned with what is necessary, likely or
possible: He must have overslept; Dinner should be ready in a few minutes; She may be ill.
o Deontic modality. Here it is a matter of what is required or permitted: You must work
harder; You should be studying for your exam; You can/may go with them if you like.
o Dynamic modality. Here it is a question of properties or dispositions of persons or other
entities involved in the situation: She can speak very persuasively (ability), Will you help
me? (willingness). This kind of meaning is mainly found with just can, will and dare.
In some cases there is a clear ambiguity as to which type of meaning is intended. You must be very
tactful, for example, can be interpreted epistemically (I'm inferring from evidence that you are very
tactful) or deontically (I'm telling you to be very tactful). She can't be serious may be understood
epistemically (She is obviously not being serious) or dynamically (She is unable to be serious).
(a) Inflection. Nouns generally exhibit inflectional contrasts of number and case:
School grammars commonly use the term `possessive' instead of `genitive', but that term is far too
specific for the wide range of relationships covered by this case: compare, for example, Kim's
parents, the boys' behaviour, the train's arrival, the mayor's obituary, the sun's rays, today's news.
(b) Function. Nouns can function as Head in noun phrases that in turn function as Subject or
Complement in clause structure, or Complement of a preposition, as illustrated in [30], where nouns
are underlined and noun phrases bracketed:
(c) Dependents. There are some kinds of Dependent that occur exclusively (or almost exclusively)
with a noun as Head:
[31] i Certain determinatives the student, a school, every book, which exam
ii Pre-head adjectives. mature students, a new book, an easy exam
iii Relative clauses the student who directed the play, a book I'm reading
(a) Determiners. These are found uniquely in the structure of noun phrases. They have the form of
determinatives (or determinative phrases, as in almost all students, not many people, too
few volunteers) or genitive noun phrases (the girl's voice, some people's behaviour, my book).
[32] i Definite the Premier of NSW, the key, this book, both copies, the man's death
ii Indefinite a politician, some keys, any serious book, enough copies, three dogs
We use a definite noun phrase when we assume that its content is sufficient, in the context, to
identify the referent. There's only one (current) Premier of NSW, so the definiteness in the first
example is unproblematic, but with the second example there is of course very heavy reliance on
context to make the referent clear. The is a pure marker of definiteness, known as the definite
article. Its use effectively pre-empts a which question: if I say Where's the key? I assume you won't
need to ask Which key? Note that a genitive Determiner confers definiteness on the noun
phrase: the man's deathmeans `the death of the man', and a man's death likewise means
`the death of a man'. Noun phrases like black coffee and friends, which have a common noun as
Head and no Determiner are normally indefinite.
(b) Complements. The clearest cases of Complements involve preposition phrases where the
preposition is specified by the Head noun, and certain types of subordinate clause:
[33] i Preposition phrases her review of the play, a ban on alcohol, his marriage to Sue
ii Subordinate clauses the idea that he might be ill, an opportunity to make friends
Note that nouns, unlike verbs, do not take Objects: we say She reviewed the play, but not *her
review the play; instead we need of the play. With ban and marriage the prepositions required
are on and to. The subordinate clauses in [ii] clearly satisfy the licensing test: only a fairly narrow
range of nouns can take Complements like these.
(c) Modifiers. The typical pre-Head Modifier is an adjective or adjective phrase: a good book, a very
serious matter. But those are not the only possibilities. In particular, nouns can also function as
Modifier to a Head noun: a school play, the unemployment situation, etc. Post-Head Modifiers are
typically preposition phrases and subordinate clauses that occur more freely than Complements in
that they do not have to be licensed by the Head noun: a man of honour, the house opposite the
post office, the play that she wrote, the guy who spoke first.
It is also possible to have Modifiers that precede the Determiner: all the books, both these
plays, too small a car for our needs. Note that adverbs can occur in this position, but not after the
Determiner: absolutely the best solution, but not *an absolutely success. Instead of the latter we
need an adjective, an absolute success.
[34] i Singular-only nouns crockery, dross, harm, nonsense; news, mumps, physics, ...
ii Plural-only nouns belongings, clothes, genitals, scissors; cattle, police, ...
Note that the last three items in [i] end in @s but are nevertheless singular, as evident, for example,
from the agreement in This news is good. Conversely, the last two items in [ii] don't end in @s, but
are nevertheless plural: cf. These cattle are in good health.
(b) Count and non-count nouns. Related to the distinction between nouns with variable number and
nouns with fixed number is that between count and non-count nouns. Count nouns can take
cardinal numerals (one, two, three, etc.) as Dependent, while non-count nouns cannot. Compare
count student (one student, two students) and non-count harm and clothes (*one harm/clothes,
*two harms/clothes).
However, most nouns can occur with either a count or a non-count interpretation:
The interpretations in [a] allow for a contrast between one and more than one (cf., for example, He
pulled out two white hairs), but those in [b] do not. When we speak of count and non-count nouns,
therefore, we are referring to nouns as used with a count and non-count interpretation. Thus hair is
a count noun in [ia], a non-count noun in [ib], and so on.
(c) Subject-verb agreement. We noted in Section5.1 that where a verb has person-number
properties they normally agree with those of the Subject noun phrase, more particularly with those
of the Head noun of that noun phrase: The dog is barking vs The dogs are barking. There are,
however, certain semantically-motivated types of departure from this pattern, as illustrated in [36]:
[36] i Measure expressions Two hours isn't long enough for such a job.
ii Quantificational nouns A lot of people like it.
iii Collective nouns The jury haven't yet reached a decision.
o In [i] the hours aren't thought of individually but as making up a single period, so the Subject is
treated as singular.
o In [ii] the verb-form is determined not by the Head noun lot but by people, which is embedded
within the Subject noun phrase.
o With collective nouns like jury in [iii] there is divided usage, with singular hasn't also used.
(b) Pronouns. The grammatically distinctive property of pronouns is that they do not normally
combine with Determiners: He arrived, not *The he arrived. There are several subtypes of pronoun,
including:
[37] i Personal pronouns I, we, you, he, she, it, they, one
ii Reciprocal pronouns each other, one another
iii Interrogative or relative pronouns who, what, which, whoever, etc.
We will comment here on only the first of these categories. Personal pronouns are those where we
find contrasts of person. I and we are first person, used to refer to the speaker or a group
containing the speaker. (`Speaker' is to be understood as covering the writer in written texts.) You is
second person, used to refer to the addressee or a group containing one or more addressees. The
others are third person: this doesn't encode reference to speaker or addressee and therefore
usually refers to entities other than the speaker or addressee. But I can refer to myself or to you in
the third person: The writerhas noticed ...; The reader may recall ...
The personal pronouns have five inflectional forms:
[38] i Nominative I, we, you, ... I did it. It was I who did it.
ii Accusative me, us, you, ... It bit me. It was me who did it.
iii Dependent genitive my, our, your, ... My son is here. I saw your car.
iv Independent genitive mine, ours, yours, ... Mine was broken. That's mine.
v Reflexive myself, ourselves, ... I hurt myself. We talk to ourselves.
Nominatives occur mostly as Head of a Subject noun phrase. In formal style they can also occur in
certain types of Predicative Complement, with the accusative as a less formal variant: It
was I/me who did it. In other types, however, only the accusative is possible: The victim was me, not
*The victim was I, and the like. Dependent genitives occur when there is a following Head in the
noun phrase, independent ones when there isn't. Reflexives usually relate back to the Subject noun
phrase, as in the above examples.
[39] i Attributive a hot day, some new DVDs, this excellent play, lonely people
ii Predicative It's hot. These look new. I found it excellent. They seem lonely.
Attributive adjectives are pre-head Modifiers in noun phrase structure; predicative adjectives are
Predicative Complements in clause structure (see Section5.5). [6]
There are, however, some adjectives that are restricted to one or other of these functions:
[40] i Attributive-only the main speaker, a mere child, the only problem, my own car
ii Never-attributive I'm afraid. She's asleep. He looks content. It's liable to flood.
[41] i Degree modification very good, quite hot, rather young, too old, incredibly bad
ii Inflection for grade hotter, younger, older, better; hottest, youngest, oldest, best
Gradable adjectives that don't inflect mark comparative and superlative degree by means of the
adverbs more and most respectively: more intelligent, most intelligent.
There are also a good number of adjectives that denote non-scalar properties and hence
are non-gradable: alphabetical order, the chief difficulty, the federal government, her right eye, thir
d place. Some adjectives, moreover, can be used in two different senses, one gradable, the other
non-gradable (and usually the more basic). In The door is open, for example, open is non-gradable,
but in You should be more open with us it is gradable.
[42] i Complements good at chess, grateful for your help, fond of animals, keen on golf,
glad that you liked it, unsure what had happened, eager to help
ii Modifiers very bad, morally wrong, this good, most useful, much better, two
days long, a bit old, cautious to excess, dangerous in the extreme
The Complements are preposition phrases or subordinate clauses; in the former case the adjective
selects a particular preposition to head the Complement: fond takes of, keen takes on, and so on.
The Modifiers are adverbs (e.g. very), determinatives (this), noun phrases (two days) or post-Head
prepositional phrases. Adjective phrases containing post-Head Dependents cannot normally be
used attributively: He's good at chess, but not *a good at chess schoolboy.
In general adverbs that can modify adjectives and other adverbs can also modify verbs, but there
are some exceptions, most notably very and too (in the sense `excessively').
Compare He's very FOND of her and *He very LOVES her (we need He loves her very MUCH).
A few adverbs inflect for grade (soon, sooner, soonest), but for the most part comparatives
and superlatives are marked by more and most: more carefully, most carefully.
[44] i Complements Luckily for me, it rained. We handled it similarly to the others.
ii Modifiers She sang very well. It won't end that soon. We left a bit late.
(a) Function of prepositions. Prepositions function as Head in preposition phrases, and these in turn
function as Dependent (Complement or Modifier) to any of the four major parts of speech:
(b) Complements of prepositions. Usually (as in all the examples in [45]) prepositions take a noun
phrase as Complement. There are, however, other possibilities:
[46] i Preposition phrase He emerged [from under the bed. I'll stay [until after lunch].
ii Adjective phrase That strikes me [as unfair]. I took him [for dead].
iii Adverb phrase I didn't know [until recently ]. I can't stay [for long].
iv Clause It depends [on what she says]. I told her [before she left].[7]
The construction is characteristic of relatively informal style, but it is a serious mistake to say that it
is grammatically incorrect.
11 NEGATION
(a) Clausal vs subclausal negation. Negation is marked by individual words such as not, no, never,
or by affixes such as we have in uncommon, non-compliant, infrequent, careless, isn't, won't, etc.
We need to distinguish, however, between cases where the negative affects the whole clause
(clausal negation) and those where it affects just a part of it (subclausal negation):
The clauses in [i] are negative, but those in [ii] are positive even though they contain a negative
element within them. We say this because they behave like obviously positive clauses with respect
to the constructions shown in [49]:
o In [a] we have a clause followed by an interrogative `tag' used to seek confirmation of what
has been said. The usual type of tag reverses the `polarity' of the clause to which it is
attached - that is, it is negative if attached to a positive clause, as in [ia], and positive if
attached to a negative clause, as in [iia]. And we see from [iiia], therefore, that He is
unwell counts as positive since the tag is negative: the clause is no more negative than He is
sick.
o In the [b] examples we have added a truncated clause introduced by and so or and nor. We
get and so after a positive clause and and nor after a negative one. And Not surprisingly, he
was ill is shown to be a positive clause because it takes and so.
(b) Non-affirmative items. There are a number of words or expressions that occur readily in negative
or interrogative clauses but generally not in positive declaratives. Compare:
Instead of [iia] we say He found some cracks. Such items as any in [50] are called non-
affirmative (with `affirmative' understood as combining declarative and positive). They include
compounds withany@, such as anybody, anyone, anything, etc., at
all, either, ever, yet, budge, can bear, can stand, give a damn, lift a finger, etc. More precisely,
these are non-affirmative in at least one of their senses: some of them also have senses in which
they can occur in affirmative constructions. The any series of words, for example, can occur in
affirmative constructions when the meaning is close to `every', as inAnyone can do that.
We use different terms for the clause types than for the speech acts because the relation between
the two sets of categories is by no means one-to-one. Consider such examples as [52]:
Grammatically, [i] is declarative, but it would be used as a question: a question can be marked by
rising intonation (or by punctuation) rather than by the grammatical structure. Example [ii] is likewise
declarative but again it would be used as a question (perhaps in a court cross-examination): the
question force this time comes from the verb ask, in the present tense with a 1st person
Subject. Promise in [iii] works in the same way: this example would generally be used to make a
promise. This illustrates the point that although we have just a handful of different clause types
there are a great many different kinds of speech act: one can apologise, offer, congratulate,
beseech, declare a meeting open, and so on. Finally, [iv] is a closed interrogative but would
characteristically be used to make a request. In this use it is what is called an indirect speech act:
although it is literally a question it actually conveys something else, a polite request.
All canonical clauses are declarative and we need say no more about this type, but a few
comments are in order for the remaining four types.
(a) Closed interrogatives. These are so called because they are typically used to ask questions with
a closed set of answers. Usually these are Yes and No (or their equivalents), but in examples like Is
it a boy or a girl? they derive from the terms joined by or: It's a boy and It's a girl. Grammatically
they are marked by Subject-auxiliary inversion (though such inversion is not restricted to
interrogatives: in the declarative Never had I felt so embarrassed it is triggered by the initial
placement of the negative never).
(b) Open interrogatives. These are typically used to ask questions with an open set of answers
(e.g. very, quite, slightly, etc. in the case of [51iii]). They are marked by the presence of an
interrogative phrase consisting of or containing a so-called `wh-
word': who, what, when, where, how, etc. This phrase may be Subject (Who said that?),
Complement (What do you want?) or Adjunct (When did he leave?). If it is Complement or Adjunct it
normally occurs at the beginning of the clause, which has Subject-auxiliary inversion, as in the last
two examples. It is possible, however, for it to remain in post-verbal position, as in And after that
you went where? (a construction most likely to be found in a context of sustained questioning).
(c) Exclamatives. These have, at the front of the clause, an exclamative phrase containing
either how, as in [51iv], or what, as in What a fool I've been!
(d) Imperatives. The most common type of imperative has you understood, as in [51v], or expressed
as Subject (as in You be careful; Don't you speak to me like that). The verb is in the plain form,
but dois used in the negative: Don't move. We also have 3rd person imperatives like Somebody
open the window, distinguished from the declarative precisely by the plain form verb. 1st person
plural imperatives are marked by let's: Let's go!, Don't let's bother.
13 SUBORDINATE CLAUSES
Subordinate clauses normally function in the structure of a phrase or a larger clause. Whereas main
clauses are almost invariably finite, subordinate clauses may be finite or non-finite.
[53] i She says that he is kept well-informed [tensed: is is present tense verb]
ii She insists that he be kept well-informed [subjunctive: be is plain form]
Like main clauses they select for clause type, except that there are no subordinate imperatives:
o Declaratives are often marked by the subordinator that; and since that occurs in both the
tensed clause and the subjunctive in [53] we include both in the declarative class.
[56] i a. I agree with [the guy who spoke last]. b. I agree with [the guy that spoke last].
ii a. He lost [the key which I lent him]. b. He lost [the key I lent him].
Such clauses contain an overt or covert element which relates back to the Head noun, so we
understand in [i] that some guy spoke last and in [ii] that I lent him a key. This `relativised element' is
overt in [ia] (the relative pronoun who) and [iia] (which), but covert in the [b] examples. This is
obvious in the case of [iib], and in [ib] that, although traditionally classified as a relative pronoun, is
better regarded as a subordinator, the same one as is found in declarative content clauses like [55i];
on this analysis there is no overt relativised element in [ib] any more than in [iib].
The relativised element can have a variety of functions in the relative clause: in [56i] it is
Subject, in [56ii] Object, and so on.
(b) Supplementary relative clauses. The relative clauses in [56] are tightly integrated into the
structure of the sentence, but it is also possible for relative clauses to be set off by punctuation or
intonation, so that they have the status of more loosely attached Supplements, as in:
[57] i I've lent the car to my brother, who has just come over from New Zealand.
ii He overslept again, which made him miss the train.
In this type the relativised element is almost always overt, and doesn't relate back to a noun but to a
larger unit, a whole noun phrase in [i] (my brother) and a clause in [ii], where which is understood as
`(the fact) that he overslept again'.
(c) The fused relative construction. This is structurally more complex than the above constructions:
[58] i a. Whoever wrote this must be very naive. b. You can invite who you like.
ii a. He quickly spent what she gave him. b. What books he has are in the attic.
The underlined sequences here are not themselves clauses but noun phrases: clauses don't denote
entities that can be naive or be invited or spent or located in the attic. Note, moreover, that are in
[iib] agrees with a plural noun phrase Subject, whereas Subjects with the form of clauses take 3rd
person singular verbs, as in [54i]. Whoever in [58ia] is equivalent to the person who and what in [iia]
to that which, and so on. This is why we call this construction `fused': the Head of the noun phrase
and the relativised element are fused together, instead of being separate, as in [56ia/iia].
These constructions may look superficially like open interrogative content clauses. Compare
[58iib], for example, with I asked her what she gave him. The meaning is quite different: the latter,
where the underlined clause is interrogative, can be glossed as `I asked her the answer to the
question, `What did she give him?'', but there is no such question meaning in [58iia]. Similarly
compare [58iib], meaning `The (few) books he has are in the attic', with What books he has is
unknown, where the underlined clause is interrogative and the meaning is `The answer to the
question `What books does he have?' is unknown'; note that this time the main clause verb is
singular is, agreeing with the clausal Subject.
[59] i a. I'm as ready as I ever will be. b. As was expected, Sue won easily.
ii a. More people came than I'd expected. b. He has more vices than he has virtues.
The distinctive property of such clauses is that they are structurally incomplete relative to main
clauses: there are elements understood but not overtly expressed. In [ia] and [iia] there's a missing
Complement and in [ib] a missing Subject. Even in [iib] there's a missing Dependent in the Object
noun phrase, for the comparison is between how many vices he has and how many virtues he has.
The fact that there's some kind of understood quantifier here is reflected in the fact that we can't
insert an overt one: *He has more vices than he has ten virtues.
Infinitivals contain a plain form of the verb, with or without the special marker to; gerund-participials
and past-participials have verbs in the gerund-participle and past participle forms; for further
examples, see [26] above.
Most non-finite clauses have no overt Subject, but all three kinds allow one under certain
conditions.
o In infinitivals, it occurs in the to-variant with initial for as subordinator: For them to be so late is
very unusual.
o In gerund-participials a personal pronoun Subject usually appears in accusative case, but
genitives are found in relatively formal style: We objected to them/their being given extra
privileges.
o Example [iiia] is a past-participial with an overt Subject.
Infinitivals are much the most frequent of the three classes of non-finite clause, and appear in
a very wide range of functions. These include Subject (To err is human), Complement of a verb (as
in [60ia/b]: the Head verb determines whether to is included), Complement of a noun (I applaud [her
willingness to compromise]), Complement of an adjective (She's [willing to compromise]), Adjunct
(She walks to work to keep fit), Modifier of a noun (I need [an album to keep the photos in]). In
general, prepositions take gerund-participials rather than infinitivals as Complement (He
left [without saying good-bye]), but the compound in order and so as are exceptions (She stayed at
home [in order to study for the exam]).
14 COORDINATION
Coordination is a relation between two or more items of equal syntactic status, the coordinates.
They are of equal status in the sense that one is not a Dependent of another.
(a) The marking of coordination. Coordination is usually but not invariably marked by the presence
of a coordinator, such as and, or, nor, but; the first three of these may also be paired with a
determinative,both, either and neither respectively. The main patterns are seen in [61]:
Examples [i]-[iii] illustrate the most usual case: a coordinator in the last coordinate. In [iv] there is a
coordinator in all non-initial coordinates, in [v] a determinative in the first, and in [vi] no overt
marking of coordination at all.
(b) Functional likeness required between coordinates. Coordination can appear at more or less any
place in the structure of sentences. You can have coordination between main clauses (giving a
compound sentence, as in [61i]), between subordinate clauses, between phrases, between words
(e.g. Have you seen my father and mother?). But the coordinates need to be grammatically alike.
Usually they belong to the same class, as in all the examples in [61]. They do not have to be,
however: the crucial constraint is that they be alike in function. Compare, then:
[63] a. Sam and Pat are a happy couple. b. Sam Pat and Alex like each other.
What is distinctive about this type is that the properties concerned, being a happy couple and liking
each other, apply to the coordinates jointly rather than separately. So we can't say *Sam is a happy
couple or *Pat likes each other. The functional likeness in this type is that the coordinates denote
members of a set to which the relevant property applies. The construction is more restricted than
the type illustrated in [61] in that it excludes determinatives (*Both Sam and Pat are a happy
couple), doesn't allow but as coordinator, and does require likeness of class between the
ccoordinates.
15 INFORMATION PACKAGING
The grammar of the clause makes available a number of constructions that enable us to express a
given core meaning in different ways depending on how we wish to to present or `package' the
information. For example, Kim broke the vase, The vase was broken by Kim, The vase Kim broke,
It was Kim who broke the vase, What Kim broke was the vase all have the same core meaning in
the sense that there is no situation or context in which one of them would be true and another false
(assuming of course that we are talking of the same Kim and the same vase). The first of them, Kim
broke the vase, is the syntactically most basic, while the others belong to various information-
packaging constructions. The most important of these constructions are illustrated by the
underlined examples in [64]:
In the first three we are concerned simply with the order of elements, while the others involve
more radical changes.
o The basic position for the Complement this one in [i] is after the verb, but in [a] it is preposed,
placed at the front of the clause.
o In [ii] the basic position for the Object, the only copy that has been corrected, is just after the
verb but long or complex elements like this can be postposed, placed at the end.
o In [iii] the positions of the Subject and Complement of the basic version [b] are reversed in the
inversion construction [a]. (More precisely, this is Subject-Dependent inversion, in contrast to
the Subject-auxiliary inversion construction discussed earlier. The Dependent is usually a
Complement but can also be an Adjunct, as in Three days later came news of her death.)
o In [iv] (the only one where the basic version has a distinct name, `active') the Object becomes
Subject, the Subject becomes Complement of by and the auxiliary be is added.
o The existential construction applies mainly with the verb be: the basic Subject is displaced to
follow the verb and the semantically empty pronoun there takes over the Subject function.
o In [vib] the Subject is a subordinate clause (that she is ill); in [a] this is extraposed, placed
after the verb phrase and this time the Subject function is taken over by the pronoun it.
o In [vii] the cleft clause is formed by dividing the basic version into two parts: one (Kim) is
highlighted by making it Complement of a clause with it as Subject and be as verb, while the
other is backgrounded by relegating it to a subordinate clause (a distinct subtype of relative
clause).
o The pseudo-cleft construction is similar, but this time the subordinated part is put in a fused
relative (what I need) functioning as Subject of be.
o Dislocation belongs to fairly informal style. It differs from the basic version in having an extra
noun phrase, set apart intonationally and related to a pronoun in the main Subject-Predicate
part of the clause. In the left dislocation variant the pronoun occurs to the left of the noun
phrase; in right dislocation it is the other way round, as in His father, she can't stand him.
There are two further comments that should be made about these constructions.
(a) Basic counterpart need not be canonical. For convenience we have chosen examples in [64]
where the basic counterparts are all canonical clauses, but of course they do not need to be. The
basic (active) counterpart of passive Was the car driven by Kim? is Did Kim drive the car?, which is
non-canonical by virtue of being interrogative. Likewise the non-cleft counterpart of It was Sue who
had been interviewed by the police is Sue had been interviewed by the police, which is non-
canonical by virtue of being passive: note then that certain combinations of the information-
packaging constructions are possible.
(b) The information-packaging construction may be the only option. The second point is that under
certain circumstances what one would expect to be the basic counterpart is in fact ungrammatical.
Thus we can say There was an accident, but not *An accident was: here the existential construction
is the only option. One difference between actives and passives is that the by phrase of the passive
is an optional element whereas the element that corresponds to it in the active, namely the Subject,
is generally obligatory in finite clauses. Compare, then:
[65] i Passive a. Some mistakes were made by Ed. b. Some mistakes were made.
ii Active a. Ed made some mistakes. b. *Made some mistakes.
Passives like [ib] - called short passives - thus have no active counterpart. They are in fact the
more common type of passive, allowing information to be omitted that would have to be expressed
in the active construction.
[1]
Written by Rodney Huddleston & Geoffrey K. Pullum in collaboration with a
team of thirteen linguists and published by Cambridge University Press in
2002. A shorter version, designed as an undergraduate textbook, appeared in
2005 as A Student's Introduction to English Grammar. I am grateful to Geoff
Pullum and Anne Horan for comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
[2]
In my Words'Worth paper I relied simply on the convention of upper vs lower
case initial to distinguish `determiner' as a class term and `Determiner' as a
function term.
[3]
We use bold italics for lexemes; lexeme is a more abstract concept than word
as it ignores inflection, so that do, does, did, etc. are all forms of a single
lexeme, do.
[4]
Traditional grammar also classifies as participles verb-forms which it regards
(mistakenly, in our view) as part of a compound verb, such
as checking in She was checking the figures (cf. Section6.3.3).
[5]
In fact there is divided usage here, and some speakers do allow may in this
construction. For them it would seem that may and might are no longer
treated as present and preterite forms of a single lexeme, but as present
tense forms of distinct lexemes.
[6]
This is the standard terminology, but note that Functional Grammar uses
`Attribute' for the most common type of Predicative Complement.
[7]
In traditional grammar it is not she left but before she left that is analysed as a
clause, with before being here a subordinating conjunction rather than a
preposition. We present arguments in favour of our analysis on pp. 1011-14
and 129-30 respectively of the two books mentioned in footnote 1. We also
depart from traditional grammar in treating words like those underlined
in Come in or I fell of as prepositions rather than adverbs.