The Structure of English Language
The Structure of English Language
The Structure of English Language
http://babelnet.sbg.ac.at/themepark/grammar/grammarindex.htm
This is a guide to the structure of the English language. Teachers of English and English as a
second language may use it for reference. This text is recommended for advanced users of
English. Please use the links below to go to the different sections of this guide.
This is a guide to the structure of the English language. Teachers of English and English as a
second language may use it for reference. This text is recommended for advanced users of
English.
We can study the structure of language in a variety of ways. For example, we can study
There is no universally accepted model for doing this, but some models use the notion of a
hierarchy, and this may prove fruitful for you.
The most basic units of meaning are simple words (e.g.: dog, yes and swim) or the elements of
complex words (e.g.: un- -happi- and -ness in unhappiness). These basic elements are called
morphemes, and the study of how they are combined in words is morphology.
The study of how words are organised into phrases, clauses and sentences is usually referred to
as syntax.
A longer stretch of language is known as discourse, the study of its structure as discourse
analysis.
This hierarchy is partly explained by the table below. The right hand column should be read
upwards, in the direction of the arrow.
Outline structure of English
sentences sentences
are analysed into are used to build
clauses clauses
are analysed into are used to build
phrases
are analysed into
↓↑ phrases
are used to build
words words
are analysed into are used to build
morphemes morphemes
↓
sentences
This is the study of the structure of words. The name comes from Greek morphos (=shape or
form). The smallest units of meaning may be whole simple words (e.g. man, run, big) or parts of
complex words (e.g. un-, -faith- and -ful in unfaithful) which are called morphemes.
Some morphemes, such as faith in un-faith-ful or dream in dream-ing can stand alone as words
which make sense. These are known as free morphemes. You will see how very many simple
words are free morphemes, but can combine with other morphemes, both free and bound (see
below) to form complex words.
Where two simple words are joined together to form a new complete word, this is called a
compound word. Examples include teapot, starlight and careworn. When these terms are first
coined, they are shown in some dictionaries with a hyphen, as light-house or fish-finger.
Other morphemes, such as prefixes and suffixes (collectively called affixes), cannot stand alone
- they need to be part of a complex word to make sense. Examples are
Bound morphemes are traditionally divided into two further classes. Sometimes a word is
changed in its form to show the internal grammar of a sentence (“agreement”). Examples would
be plural forms of nouns (dog + s → dog-s) or past (imperfect) tenses of regular verbs (want +
ed → want-ed). The study of such changes is inflectional morphology (because the words in
question are inflected - altered, in this case by adding a suffix).
Other compound or complex words are made by adding together elements without reference to
the internal grammar of a sentence. For example, the verb infect suggests a new verb disinfect
(=to undo the action of infecting). New words are often formed by noun + -ize, noun + ism, or
verb + able (scandalize, Thatcherism, disposable). The study of such words, “derived” from
existing words or morphemes is derivational morphology. The elements of which the word is
made may have a grammatical relationship within the word (you may find this idea difficult),
but their formation is independent of the syntax of the clause or sentence in which they occur. If
you find this puzzling, two things may help:
But note: a complex word may show both inflection and derivation! A derived word may be
inflected to show, for example, tense or number: deported or disposables (as in nappies).
This table shows how the most common kinds of inflection are found in three word classes:
Remember that morphology is the study of the structure of words. The structure of words can
also be studied to show how the meaning of a given morpheme, or its relation to the rest of the
word, varies from one complex word to another. Consider how sun works in the following
words: sunbeam, sunburnt, sundial, sunflower, sunglasses, sunlight, sunrise, sun-spot (scientific
sense), sun-spot (tourist sense), suntan.
Inflection does not really yield “new” words, but alters the form of existing ones for specific
reasons of grammar. Derivation, on the other hand, does lead to the creation of new words.
There are at least four normal processes of word-formation, of which three are examples of
derivation:
Affix placed before Affix placed after Two base forms are Word changes class,
base of word, e.g. base of word, e.g. added together, e.g. without any change of
disobey kindness blackbird form, e.g. (the) pet (n)
becomes (to) pet (vb.)
Words considered as wholes can be categorized according to how they work within phrases,
clauses or sentences. These categories, traditionally called parts of speech are now more usually
known as word classes. Parts of speech are labels for categories in which words are usually
placed. But in a given sentence a word from one category may behave as if it were in another. A
dictionary will only record established or standard usage.
The traditional parts of speech were of eight kinds, excluding the two articles (a/an, the). These
were nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, prepositions, conjunctions, adverbs, and interjections.
Modern linguists prefer to list words in classes that are coherent - all the words in them should
behave in the same way. But if this principle were applied rigidly, we would have hundreds of
classes, so irregularities are tolerated!
The Structure of English Language - Word Classes
We put words into categories or logical groups, according to how they work within phrases,
clauses or sentences. These categories, traditionally called parts of speech are now more usually
known as word classes. Parts of speech are labels for categories in which we usually place
words. But in a given sentence a word from one category may behave as if it were in another. A
dictionary will only record established or standard usage.
The traditional parts of speech were of eight kinds, excluding the two articles (a/an, the). These
were
nouns,
pronouns,
adjectives,
verbs,
prepositions,
conjunctions,
adverbs, and
interjections.
Modern linguists prefer to list words in classes that are coherent - all the words in them should
behave in the same way. But if this principle were applied rigidly, we would have hundreds of
classes, so we allow irregularities!
Some classes of words are called closed because they contain a relatively small number of items
to which no new words can normally be added. These are the structural words, which include:
Other classes of word are constantly being added to. Each contains a vast number of terms
already. They are open to new words being introduced. The open classes are
nouns,
verbs and
the words which qualify them, adjectives and adverbs.
These form the bulk of a language's vocabulary or lexis (also lexicon, though this sometimes
refers to a published version). These classes may be called lexical whereas the closed-class
words are structural or functional. These tables illustrate the two kinds of word class.
Closed Word Classes
A, the, any, my, those, She, them, who, that, In, across, at, by, And, but, if, or, while,
which himself near, within unless
Abstract: fear, joy Transitive: bite, steal Descriptive: lazy, tall Manner: reluctantly,
keenly, easily, softly
Concrete: chair, mud Intransitive: live, cry Comparative: lazier
Time: soon, often
Common: boy, town Modal: can, will, may Superlative: tallest
Place: here, there
Proper: Fred, Hull Auxiliary: be, have,
do
Problems of classification
Some words are difficult to classify. Not all grammatical descriptions will place them in the
same word class. This, these or those are sometimes classified as demonstrative (or distinctive)
adjectives or pronouns. Possessives, like my, his, their, are sometimes classified as pronouns
(showing the word from which they are formed), sometimes as adjectives, showing their
grammatical function of qualifying nouns: usually they are pronouns when alone (I like that) and
adjectives when they precede a noun (I like this cupof tea). Traditional lists of adverbs contain
words like very which qualify other adverbs or adjectives. This word class is sometimes called a
“dustbin class”, because any word for which there is no obvious class will be put in it! Among
words which have sometimes been classified as adverbs are the following: however, just, no,
not, quickly, tomorrow and when.
This incoherence has long been recognized by grammarians who subdivide adverbs into further
categories, such as adverbs of time, place or manner.
In trying to organize words into coherent classes, linguists will consider any or all of the
following:
Also note that a dictionary does not (or should not) prescribe, but indicates the word class or part
of speech where a word is usually placed. But in a given sentence, if the speaker or writer has
used it as if it were in a different class, then this is where it should be placed.
For example, toilet is usually classified as a noun. But UK primary school teachers often speak
of toileting children (I had to toilet John twice today). In describing such a sentence, you should
be guided by the internal grammar of the sentence (syntax) rather than the dictionary. Here toilet
is a transitive verb. If this usage becomes standard, lexicographers will record it. This kind of
word formation is called conversion, a self-explanatory name.
Every statement is a combination of words, and every statement says something to communicate
information. The simplest possible kind of statement - for example, Dogs bark - has two kinds of
words in it. It has a what word, dogs, and a what happens word, bark. These kinds of words are
the most basic parts of any statement. If a person only says dog, no statement is made, and no
information is conveyed. A sound is made that calls to mind a common, four-footed animal, but
nothing regarding it is learned.
The what words are called nouns. They tell what is being talked about. They are identifying
words, or names. Nouns identify persons, places, or things. They may be particular persons,
places, or things: Michael Jackson, Reykjavik, World Trade Center. Or they may be general
nouns: singer, town, building. Concrete nouns indicate things that can be seen such as car,
teapot, and potato. Abstract nouns denote concepts such as love, honesty,and beauty.
The what happens words are called verbs. They are the action words in a statement. Without
them it is impossible to put sentences together. It is the verb that says something about the noun:
dogs bark, birds fly, fish swim. Verbs are the important words that create information in
statements. Although nouns alone make no statement, verbs can occasionally do so. Help! gives
the information that someone is in trouble, and Go away! tells someone or something
emphatically to leave.
Besides nouns and verbs there are other kinds of words that have different functions in
statements. They are pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, articles, prepositions, and a
very few words that can be called function words because they fit into none of the other
categories. All of these kinds of words together are called parts of speech. They can just as well
be called parts of writing because they apply to written as well as to spoken language.
The Structure of English Language — Nouns and Articles
Nouns can be particular or general: the house, a house. The words the and a are articles, or, in
more technical terms, determiners. A house can be any house, but the house is a quite definite
building. When a noun begins with a vowel (a, e, i, o, u, and, occasionally, y) the indefinite
article a becomes an for the sake of easier pronunciation - an apple, an elephant, an orange.
Sometimes an is used before words that start with h, especially if the h is silent: an honorary
degree. If the h is sounded a is the standard form: an ’otel, a hat.
Nouns can be singular or plural in number: cat, cats. In some cases es is added to make nouns
plural: dress, dresses. Some nouns change their forms in the plural, without adding an s: foot,
feet; man, men; mouse, mice; goose, geese Some nouns do not change at all in the plural: sheep,
fowl.
There are also group nouns, called noun phrases. This means that two or more nouns, or a noun
and an adjective, are put together to form what amounts to, or works like, one noun: football
stadium, rock concert, orange tree. In each case certain nouns - football, rock, orange - are
attached to other nouns, and each modifies or describes the second noun in some way to convey
a different kind of object. A football and a football stadium are two entirely different things,
though they both have to do with the same game.
Some nouns are one-of-a-kind names: Suez Canal, Elvis Presley, Empire State Building. Also
called proper nouns, they are capitalized to set them off from general nouns. Sometimes
adjectives (words that describe nouns) are also capitalized. This normally happens when the
adjective is made from a proper noun, especially a place or person: American literature, English
countryside, Elizabethan theatre.
Nouns are used in different ways: The dog barks. The man bit the dog. In the first case, dog is
the actor, or the one that initiates the action of the verb. In the second case, dog is acted upon. In
The dog barks, dog is the subject of the verb. In “The man bit the dog”, dog is the object of the
verb.
Sometimes a noun is the indirect object of a verb: He gave the dog a bone. Bone is the direct
object; it is what was given. Because it was given to the dog, dog is considered the indirect
object of the action.
Nouns can also be objects of prepositions - words like to, in, for, and by - so the above sentence
could read: He gave a bone to the dog. The words to the dog are called a prepositional phrase.
Some verb forms take nouns as objects: Drinking milk is good for you. In this sentence, milk is
the object of the verbal form drinking. Such a combination of verb and noun is called a verbal
phrase.
Nouns can show possession: The dog's collar is on the table. The collar is possessed, or owned,
by the dog. All possession does not indicate ownership, however. In The building's roof is black,
the roof is on, but not owned by, the building. Adding an apostrophe [ ' ] and an s to a noun
shows possession: the cat's tongue, the woman's purse. If the noun is plural (stands for more
than one thing) or already has an s, then often only an apostrophe need be added: the mothers'
union (that is, a union of many mothers). The word of may also be used to show possession: the
top of the house, the light of the candle, the Duke of Wellington.
There are several words that are used to replace nouns. They are called pronouns. Pro in Greek
means "for" or "in place of". Some are called personal pronouns because they take the place of
specific names of persons, places, or thing, as in: Has Fred arrived? Yes, he is here. Here he is
the personal pronoun that replaces Fred. As indicated in the table, there are both subject and
object personal pronouns as well as those that show possession. In His house is the white and
green one, his is a personal possessive pronoun.
Third person he, she, it (one) him, her, it (one) his, her, hers, its (one's)
*Some authorities give my, your, his, her, our, your and their as possessive adjectives or
pronominal adjectives, as they qualify nouns.
Some personal pronouns are formed by the addition of -self or -selves as a suffix: myself,
ourselves, yourself, himself, herself, itself, and themselves.
Demonstrative pronouns - this, that, these, those - refer to particular people or things. This is
mine, and that is yours. The demonstrative words can also be used as adjectives: this house,
those cars.
Pronouns that refer to people or things in general are called indefinite pronouns. Like the
demonstrative pronouns, they can be used as adjectives: another day, both animals, many weeks.
The words who, whose, whom, that, which, and what are called relative pronouns. (The word
that can be a demonstrative or a relative pronoun.) They create relative clauses in a sentence:
The committee, which met last night, discussed your report. The words which met last night
form a relative clause that describes the subject of the main clause, the committee.
When a relative pronoun is used as the subject of a sentence such as Who ate the pizza?, it is
classed as an interrogative pronoun. Interrogate means “ask” (questions).
Verbs are the action words in a statement. They tell what is happening - what a noun is doing or
what is being done to it, or the state of being, becoming, thinking or feeling. A verb with a
subject, which will be in a particular tense is a finite verb. Without a subject it will be the
infinitive form (for example, to think, to dream) or a gerund (the present participle, used as a
noun: smoking is bad for you).
When a verb denotes what a noun is doing, the noun is said to be the subject of the verb: The
man speaks. (Here man is the subject of the verb.) When the verb denotes what is being done to
a noun, the noun is the object of the verb: The man eats jelly. Here the noun jelly is the direct
object of the verb. Verbs can also take indirect objects: Parents give children toys. In this
sentence, toys is the direct object, (what is given) and children is the indirect object. The parents
do not give children; they give toys.
Verbs that take objects are called transitive verbs, and those that normally do not take an object
are intransitive verbs (but note that an intransitive verb may be used transitively in non-standard
speech or writing). Some common transitive verbs are: tell, give, show, eat, buy, take, and see.
Some verbs can be both transitive and intransitive: Tell a story (transitive), and Time will tell
(intransitive). Verbs like sleep, walk, rest, come, and go are nearly always intransitive. The most
common verb of all, to be, is intransitive in all of its forms: am, are, is, was, were, and been.
Tenses (time signals): Verb tenses tell the time when an action takes place. Any action or
condition may be in the past, present, or future: he was, he is, he will be. Most common verbs
simply add an -ed to show the past time, or form the past tense, as it is normally called. Thus
walk becomes walked. Other verbs, sometimes called irregular (or strong) verbs, do not add -ed.
Instead they undergo an internal change: sing, sang, sung; fly, flew, flown; go, went, gone.
Auxiliary verbs: In the sentence She will sing even though he cannot stay, the verbs will and
cannot are called auxiliary, or helper, verbs. Other auxiliary verbs are the incomplete or modal
verbs: can, could, may, might, shall, should, and would.
The various forms of the verb to be can also be used as auxiliaries: I am going. He was singing.
They have been shopping. The verb have - and its other forms has and had - are also common
auxiliaries to indicate past action.
Participles: The verb form used with auxiliaries is the participle. There is a present participle,
talking, and a past participle, talked. Thus, a person can say either I talk (present tense) or I am
talking (present continuous) to show present action and I talked (imperfect), I have talked
(perfect), or I had talked (pluperfect) to show past action. When a present participle is used with
an auxiliary verb, the purpose is to show continuing or ongoing action. She is doing the laundry.
He was speaking when someone interrupted him. Note that this uses a present participle with a
past tense auxiliary verb (was) to indicate continuous past action.
Verb flexibility: Verbs and verb forms can be used in a number of ways in sentences. A verb can
be the subject of a statement (To walk is good exercise) or its object (I like to walk). In each
case, the infinitive form to walk is used as a noun. Participles can be used in the same way: He
likes swimming. Flying is great sport. In the first sentence, swimming is the object of the verb,
and in the second, flying is the subject.
Verb forms can also be used as adjectives, or words that describe nouns. In a wrecked car, the
word wrecked is a past participle used as an adjective.
Occasionally a verb form or verb phrase can be used as an adverb: He was pleased to meet her.
The phrase to meet her modifies the adjective pleased.
Adjectives and adverbs are descriptive words, sometimes called modifiers because they restrict
meaning. They add detail to statements. The difference between the two is that
adjectives modify only nouns, pronouns, and verb forms used as nouns;
adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
Adjective function: An adjective may be a single word: blue, tall, funny, warm. As a single
word, it may come before the noun - the blue sky - or after the verb - the sky is blue. Adjectives
may be positive (tall), comparative (taller) or superlative (tallest). Adjective phrases usually
follow the noun they describe: the girl with blond hair. The phrase with blond hair describes
girl. Adjective clauses also usually follow the noun: The child who finds the most Easter eggs
wins. The clause who finds the most Easter eggs modifies child.
Adverb function: The most common use of an adverb, of course, is to describe verbs: He ran
quickly. Actually, however, adverbs can modify anything but nouns (or verb forms used as
nouns). Typically adverbs express:
Although many adverbs are formed by adding -ly to adjectives (quick, quickly; happy, happily),
adverbs have no characteristic form. They must be identified by the function they perform in a
sentence. In the sentence That is a fast car, fast is an adjective. But in He ran fast, it is an
adverb.
Certain adverbs (how, when, where, why, whenever, and wherever) are called relative adverbs
because they introduce relative clauses in a sentence: The keys are upstairs where you left them.
The clause where you left them modifies the adverb upstairs.
Other adverbs are called conjunctive adverbs because they join one clause with another. Some of
these adverbs are: therefore, accordingly, besides, furthermore, instead, meanwhile, and
nevertheless. In the sentence He was tired; therefore he stayed home, the word therefore
modifies the clause of which it is a part and connects that clause to the previous part of the
sentence. Note that therefore is not to be used as a conjunction, hence the semi-colon.
Conjunctions are joining words: they connect words, phrases, or entire clauses. There are two
general kinds of conjunctive words: coordinate and subordinate.
Coordinate conjunctions join elements that are grammatically the same: two or more words, two
equivalent phrases, or two equivalent clauses. The most common coordinate conjunctions are:
and, but, or, for, nor, so, yet.
Other word uses. Words that normally operate as conjunctions can often be used in other ways:
as adverbs, prepositions, adjectives, or even pronouns.
There are other words besides conjunctions that serve as connectors (or connectives) in
sentences. The relative pronouns who and which are often so used.
Some of the conjunctions work both as adverbs and conjunctions in the same sentence. This is
often true of consequently, however, therefore, and nevertheless.
Note the semi-colon [ ; ]. This is standard here but is non-standard before but or and. (This
appears to be changing, as speakers and writers treat words like nevertheless as conjunctions.)
It is possible to make clauses with conjunctions into separate sentences, especially when writing
for literary effect.
In the second case the clause is so obviously dependent that it would not stand alone as a
sentence and make sense. It can only be written that way for emphasis or some other effect.
Prepositions are words or groups of words, that introduce phrases; and these phrases modify
some element in a sentence. What follows a preposition is normally a noun, pronoun, or noun
clause. A word that follows a preposition is its object, and, in the case of pronouns especially,
this affects the form of the word.
One of the problems in spotting prepositions in a sentence is that many of the words that are
usually prepositions can also be used as adverbs.
Parts of speech, or word categories, indicate what words usually do, or may be expected to do.
Some of these categories - such as nouns and pronouns - make sense when we consider words in
isolation. Others - such as conjunctions or prepositions - only make sense within a longer
structure, a phrase, clause or sentence.
Note that these three terms are traditional, and do not easily describe how strings of language
work. All are broad categories. The sentence, especially, is much more characteristic of written
than of spoken English, and of formal rather than informal usage. Alternatively, we may say that
spoken English contains sentence types not usually found in writing.
The internal grammar of phrases, clauses and sentences refers to the principles (sometimes
mistakenly called “rules”) of structure and organization. Be aware of the tension between model
structures devised for textbooks and guides for learners of the language, and the syntax of real
sentences (those you have found in speech or writing), which you are subjecting to analysis.
A phrase is a useful all-purpose name for any short sequence of words (or even a single word,
considered as an element in the structure of a clause or sentence), especially a grouping which
could be replaced by a single word. A phrase which works like, or equates to, a noun is a noun
phrase, one which qualifies a verb is an adverb phrase and so on.
A clause may be short or long, but must contain at least one main, finite verb. A short clause
may in fact be identical with a verb phrase: the two terms reflect differences of emphasis or
analysis in regard to the language string in question.
If you are analysing a sentence, you will look first for clauses;
if you wish to see how words have been combined in simple sequences, you will look for
phrases.
Phrases are especially important for analysing spoken data, and some kinds of written text (such
as advertisements or information leaflets) where (written) sentence forms are not considered
essential.
The Structure of English Language — Phrases
Noun phrases | adjective phrases | adverb phrases | prepositional phrases | pronoun phrases | verb
phrases
Noun phrases
The noun phrase (NP) is the main construction which can be the object, subject or complement
of a clause. It must contain a noun or noun-like word (such as a pronoun) which is the main
element, and which is called the head. It may contain other elements, either before or after the
head. These could include predeterminers, determiners, postdeterminers, premodifiers and
postmodifiers. The examples in the table below show how noun phrases can grow in length,
while their structure remains fairly clear.
Noun Phrases
Not quite all the hot tasty currant buns are for sale.
Not quite all the hot tasty currant buns on the table are for sale.
on show on the
Not quite all the many hot tasty currant buns are for sale.
table
Adjective phrases
These are usually formed from an intensifier, followed by the head (an adjective, shown
underlined below). Examples include very happy, not too awkward, and cold enough. They may
also be formed from an adjective and a verb construction, such as easy to please, loath to do it.
Adverb phrases
These are intensifying expressions formed from an intensifier (optional), followed by the head
(an adverb, shown underlined below), followed by a postmodifier (optional). Examples would
be: terribly slowly, very happily indeed, exceptionally carefully, completely utterly dangerously,
quite often and very soon.
These are formed from the head (a preposition, shown underlined in the examples), followed by
a noun phrase. Examples of prepositional phrases are in the teapot, on the toilet, and round the
bend.
They may be called adverbials since their usual function is to qualify a verb in the same way as
an adverb does. You can test this by replacing a given prepositional phrase with an adverb - for
example: Fred swam in the river and Fred swam swiftly. Both of these are grammatically
standard forms.
They may also function as adjectives: the pirate with the wooden leg.
Pronoun phrases
These are restricted to a small number of constructions, and are sometimes regarded as a minor
type of noun phrase. They are formed from a head (a pronoun, shown in bold below) with a pre-
or postmodifier. Examples would be: Silly me! You there! she herself, we all, nearly everyone,
and such relative clause types as those who knew Fred.
Verb phrases
These are quite simple syntactically, although the verb in them may contain important
grammatical information, such as tense, number, active or passive voice and so on. (All of these
are explained above in the section on word categories). One or more auxiliaries may precede the
head (a verb participle, shown in bold below). Examples would be: has died, may have gone,
might have been listening. You may be puzzled by the simplicity of these models. Don't be. In
order to explain the more complex function of verbs in the predicates of sentences (what they
say about their subject), we use the structural model of the clause.
The Structure of English Language
In the syntax of English and other modern European languages, such as Dutch, French, German
or Italian, the two most important structures are almost certainly clauses and sentences. Please
note that:
Before you look at descriptions of either structure, you may wonder why they appear together in
the heading above. This is because neither makes sense without the other. Writers of language
textbooks may put either of them ahead of the other, depending upon whether their structural
model builds (or synthesises) smaller structures into larger ones (“bottom up”) or analyses larger
structures into smaller ones (“top down”). This is explained at the start of this guide, and briefly
again below, under the heading Building or analysing? This guide places clauses before
sentences, in keeping with its "bottom up" or synthetic approach. You should try to explain the
subject with both synthetic and analytic models.
Clauses
We can understand a clause in several ways. Simply it can be seen as a verb and the words or
phrases which cluster round it. One linguist describes it as "a structural unit smaller than a
sentence but larger than phrases or words". The problem here is that in some cases a clause may
appear identical with a sentence or phrase, but the term we use tells us about a different
structural feature. A more difficult explanation to follow is that a clause is a syntactic unit
consisting of a verb, together with its associated subject, objects or complements and adverbials.
Note that the only obligatory (“must have”) elements are the subject and the verb (usually, but
not always, in this order). So before you can go further, you need to know about these different
clause elements (parts of the clause).
You may have met the term clause in other contexts - it is used to identify short passages within
longer ones (such as paragraphs) in such texts as legal or parliamentary documents. The writers
of these will often construct artificial sentences which are broken into a series of clauses, so that
these can be named. This allows us to write such things as "Paragraph x , clause y of the Sale of
Goods Act, 1979 protects consumers." Here clause identifies the unit of syntax (and its meaning
or semantic content) but may not in every case exactly match the models explained here or in
grammatical reference works.
The Structure of English Language - Clause Elements
These are well worth learning about, as you will certainly want to use them to explain the syntax
of language data you are studying in exams or investigations. If you are not able to describe or
identify clause types, it is usually acceptable and always helpful to consider how these elements
work together. You may use them to explain how sentences work, also. They are:
subject (S), object (O), verb (V), complement (C), adverbial (A)
Subject
Object
Verb
This is the central and obligatory element. A clause must contain at least one verb phrase,
which may be a single verb: Jesus wept. They are drowning. The cow jumped over the
moon.
The choice of verb will largely determine what other elements are in the clause.
The verb usually has a subject. A transitive verb is one which takes a direct object.
(Strictly this is a tautology since transitive = “taking a direct object”)
Complement
Complement (verb) means “go with”. (Do not confuse with compliment). In clause
syntax, the complement is anything which adds to the meaning of the subject (subject
complement) or object (object complement).
Subject complement usually follows the verb. The most common verb for a subject
complement is the verb to be, but some other verb may be substituted where the meaning
of be is expressed. These are called copular (= linking) verbs or simply copulas. In the
examples complements are in red type, copular verbs underlined: She is a doctor. That
smells heavenly. The students are feeling dazed and confused.
Object complement usually follows the direct object: Sunshine makes me very happy.
The voters elected Clinton president of the USA.
Adverbials
These clause elements add to or complete the meaning of the verb element. They may be
single adverbs. But they also include nouns, noun or verb phrases and subordinate
clauses: They ran quickly. He went home twice nightly. We walked on the playground.
My friend phoned me this morning. I was happy when I saw her again.
Adverbials may appear in several positions in the clause, but are most common at the
end: Often I dream. I often dream. I dream often.
Adverbials may perform different functions:
o Adding information: I walked quietly.
o Linking clauses: The bus was full. However, Fred found a seat.
o Adding a comment on what is expressed: Quite frankly we disapprove of violence.
Some verbs (like put) must have an adverbial to complete their meaning: Please put the
gun down. The path runs around the field.
Vocatives
These are optional elements used to show the person to whom a sentence is addressed.
They may occur in various positions in the clause. They include names, titles, evaluative
labels, the pronoun you and certain kinds of clause:
o John, it's me.
o It's me, darling.
o Hello, Susan, how are you?
o You silly person, what do you mean?
o Honey, I shrank the kids.
o Come out, whoever you are.
o Come in, ladies, and sit down.
o Madam Speaker, I will give way.
Clause elements combine to form clauses. The number of patterns is small. According to
David Crystal (The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, p. 221) there are
only seven basic types.
o S + V: I / yawned
o S + V + O: Fred / opened / the door
o S + V + C: The dinner / is / ready
o S + V + A: Dick Whittington / went / to London
o S + V + O + O: Romeo / gave / Juliet / a kiss
o S + V + O + C: Henry/ got/ his feet/ very wet
o S + V + O + A: Sam / put / the beer / in the cellar
Building or analysing?
These are contrasting ways of organizing the same theoretical model. We may either analyse
long structures (and find the smaller elements in them) or think of how smaller elements are
combined to form longer structures. The second approach has been seen as akin to what really
happens in speech and writing (phrase structure grammar). Noam Chomsky argues that real
language users start with longer structures and alter these by means of transformations
(transformational grammar). For example, a model or paradigm with an active verb is changed
by a transformational rule into a structure with a passive verb.
To understand the contrast in these approaches, see the table at the start of this guide to structure.
The two approaches are shown in simple form below:
Coordinate clauses
The simplest sentences may contain a single clause. (Simple is a standard description of one
kind of sentence.) Where a sentence contains more than one clause, these may be considered of
equal grammatical importance. If this is so, these are coordinate clauses. They are joined by a
coordinating conjunction, such as and or but. (Some grammarians call the first clause of the
sentence the main clause, and the others coordinate clauses). Here are some examples. Apart
from the conjunctions (or, so and and, everything else is a main/coordinate clause):
You can travel by tube, you can drive or you can take the train.
The weather was hot, so I went on my bike.
Lucy opened her window, and in came Count Dracula.
Subordinate clauses
Sometimes the clauses are placed in a hierarchy: the more important ones are main clauses,
while the less important are subordinate clauses. A main or coordinate clause could stand on its
own as a sentence, but a subordinate clause works only within a sentence. A subordinate clause
can do the job of other clause elements. It can work as subject, object, complement and
adverbial, as in these examples:
Subordinate object clause: I did not know that you were here.
Clause as object = that you were here; main clause = I did not know X; verb = did not know
Clause as complement = learning this grammar; main clause = Your first job is X; verb = is
Clause as adverbial = when you're ready; main clause = Come round (X); verb = Come
Clauses that function as subject, object or complement replace noun phrases, so they are called
nominal clauses. Those that function as adverbs/adjectives are adverbial/adjectival clauses.
Some other kinds of nominal clauses are shown below. For clarity, they are all shown in object
position. This is not the only place where they may occur, but is the most common.
That clause: I think (that) you know each other. (That may be omitted if understood.)
Wh- clause: I know what you did last summer. (Clause introduced by who, when, what,
why, whether.)
-ing clause: I don't recall seeing her there. (Clause introduced by present participle.)
inf. clause: I wish to confess to my crimes. (Clause introduced by to + infinitive.)
Adverbial clauses
These are introduced by a subordinating conjunction, which explains the adverbial meaning of
the clause. These include when/before/after/while (time); because/since (reason); if/unless/lest
(condition), as in these examples:
Two minor types of adverbial clause are inf. and -ing clauses.
Inf. clause: I went to the shop to buy some presents. (Clause introduced by to +
infinitive.)
-ing clause: Jane broke her arm while fighting. (Clause introduced by present participle.)
Adjectival clauses
A familiar type is the relative clause, introduced by a relative pronoun (who, whom, whose, that,
which), as in these examples:
Two minor types of adjectival clause are -ing and -ed clauses.
-ing clause: The train now standing at platform four is the 5.30 to Leeds.
-ed clause: She is the celebrity pursued by the press.
Since past participles do not all end in -ed we may find other verb forms in such clauses: The tea
drunk by the students or the exam taken by the pupils.
Clause elements may be single words of the appropriate category, they may be phrases or even
some kinds of subordinate clause. Explaining even simple structures is difficult. Verbal
explanations are less easy to make than diagrams. These work best when there is a hierarchical
level, as sentences are analysed into clauses, which are further analysed into (more clauses and)
phrases, which are analysed into words, which are analysed into morphemes.
In an exam, you are very unlikely to be required to analyse long sequences. Use clause analysis
(or phrase analysis) selectively, to establish some point about language acquisition (learning to
make or understand structures), about language and society (how structures embody social
attitudes to language), language change (how structures or paradigms change over time) or
stylistics (how structures embody style).
In many respects, sentences can be analysed in the same terms as clauses, that is separating the
elements into the categories of subject, object, verb, complement and adverbial.
Simple sentences
The most basic sentence form contains a single clause. This is known as a simple sentence:
Compound sentences
Multiple sentences
A multiple sentence links clauses of essentially similar type, with coordinating conjunctions.
I came home, sat down, put the kettle on, lit the fire and sat down with a book.
Complex sentences
A complex sentence uses subordination to link clauses. It is not necessarily very "complex" in
the everyday sense (that is, difficult to analyse), but it may be:
This is a simple kind of classification. Sentences are traditionally categorized into four types:
statement, command, question or exclamation. These are readily illustrated by examples (note
alternative names).
Tag questions
Here a statement is turned into a question, with an interrogative tag at the end. Tags are typical
of speech where the speaker changes the function of the sentence in mid-utterance:
Exclamatory questions
Here the structure is that of a question, but the meaning (indicated in speech by intonation)
equates to an exclamation:
Rhetorical questions
Again the structure is that of a question, but the speaker (or writer) expects no answer. They are
used as emphatic statements:
How on earth should I know? Is the Pope a Catholic? Do bears poo in the woods?
Directives
These are akin to imperatives, but include related functions of instruction, direction and so on.
They include: commanding, inviting, warning, pleading, suggesting, advising, permitting,
requesting, meditating, expressing wish or imprecation. Many of these sentence types use the
verbs let and do in non-standard ways:
Echoes
These are sentences of a special kind, which reflect the structure of a preceding sentence from a
different speaker in a language interaction (usually conversation):
Echo of statement: A: It took me five hours to get here. B: Five hours to get here?
Echo of question: A: Have you seen my wife? B: Have I seen your lice?
Echo of directive: A: Sit down there. B: Down there?
Echo of exclamation: A: What a fool! B: What a complete fool!
Some unusual types of sentence cannot be analysed in a regular way. They are found in
particular kinds of text and discourse - some are common in real speech or fictional dialogue,
while others are found in such things as headlines or slogans, where a message is presented as a
block of text. They do not follow all the rules of normal grammar, such as verb agreement.
Among the types are:
Formulae for set social situations: Cheers, Hello, Ciao, See you, How do you do? Ta!
Emotional or functional noises (traditionally interjections): Hey! Ugh! Agh! Ow! Tut!
Shh! (Note how such forms are subject to change over time. Consider Tush, eh, hein?)
Proverbs or aphorisms: Easy come, easy go. Least said, soonest mended.
Short forms as used in messages, instructions or commentaries: Wish you were here.
Shearer to Beckham. Simmer gently. Hope you are well.
Elliptical words or phrases with a structural meaning equivalent to a complete
exclamation, question or command: Brilliant! Lovely day! Coming? Drink? All aboard!
Drink up!
For purposes of analysing style, sentences may be described as loose, balanced or periodic.
Loose sentence
Here the writer or speaker states fact after fact as they occur, seemingly freely and artlessly, as in
the opening of The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe:
“I was born in the year 1632, in the city of York, of a good family, though not of that country, my father
being a foreigner of Bremen, who settled first at Hull: he got a good estate by merchandise, and leaving
off his trade, lived afterwards at York, from whence he had married my mother, whose relations were
named Robinson, a very good family in that country, and from whom I was called Robinson Kreutznoer;
but by the usual corruption of words in England, we are now called, nay we call ourselves, and write our
name Crusoe, and so my companions always called me. ”
Balanced sentence
Here the writer or speaker has a concern for symmetry - the second half of the sentence contains
a similar or opposite idea to the first half. These techniques are very effective in persuasion, and
are sometimes known as parallelism or antithesis. Consider this from Francis Bacon (1561-
1626):
“Children sweeten labours, but they make misfortunes more bitter: they increase the cares of life, but
they mitigate the remembrance of death.”
Or this from Viscount Grey of Fallodon, on the eve of the First World War:
“The lamps are going out all over Europe: we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.”
“Ask not what your country can do for you: ask what you can do for your country.”
Periodic sentence
Here the climax of the sentence comes at its end. A good example is in the opening of Edward
Gibbon's 18th century Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire:
“It was in Rome, on the 15th of October 1764, as I sat musing amidst the ruins of the Capitol, while the
barefooted friars were singing vespers in the temple of Jupiter, that the idea of writing the decline and
fall of the city first started to my mind.”