Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
SYNTAX (378-539).doc
Скачиваний:
13
Добавлен:
25.04.2019
Размер:
429.57 Кб
Скачать

§ 403. Sentences with only one predication are called simple sentences. Those with more than one predication have usually no general name 1. We shall call them composite sentences.

In a composite sentence each predication together with the words attached is called a clause.

Composite sentences with coordinated clauses are com­pound sentences.

She's a very faithful creature and I trust her. (Cronin).

Composite sentences containing subordinated clauses are complex sentences.

If I let this chance slip, I’т a fool. (Cronin).

In a complex sentence we distinguish the principal clause (I'm a fool) and the subordinate clause (If I let this chance slip) or clauses.

We may also differentiate compound-complex (He seems a decent chap, and he thinks Ferse at the moment is as sane as himself. Galsworthy), and complex-compound (When that long holocaust of sincerity was over and the bride had gone, she subsided into a chair. Galsworthy) sentences.

There may be several degrees of subordination in a complex sentence.

It was almost nine o'clock before he reached the club, where he found Lord Henry sitting alone. (Wilde).

The clause where he found Lord Henry sitting alone is subordinated to the subordinate clause before he reached the club and is therefore of the second degree of subordination.

________________________________________

1 Sometimes they are called periods, but as the opposite of simple sentences the term does not seem to fit. H. Poutsma names them compo­site sentences, a term we adopt here.

§ 404. The clauses of a composite sentence may be joined with the help of connective words (syndetically) or directly, without connectives (asyndetically).

E. g. We consent to be in the hands of men in order that they may be in ours. (Galsworthy). You're modern, Fleur; I'm mediaeval. (Ib.).

§ 405. A simple sentence or a clause containing some words besides the predication is called extended. An unextend­ed sentence (clause) contains no other parts but the subject and the predicate.

A sentence (clause) with several subjects to one predicate or several predicates to one subject is called a contracted one.

E. g. Diana crossed to the window and stood there with her back to Dinny. (Ib.).

§ 406. The dominating type of sentence (clause), with full predication, i. e. containing both the subject and the predi­cate, is called a two-member sentence (clause). All other types are usually called one-member sentences (clauses). Here are some examples of one-member sentences.

Put your money on Old Maid. (Galsworthy).

A cup of tea!

Thanks.

These sentences are representatives of certain types that are established in the language system alongside of the two-member type. They are not speech modifications of some other type of sentence, as the so-called 'elliptical' sentences are (see § 418).

B. As to Their Categories

§ 407. The sentences He is a student Is he a student? form a syntactical opposeme. Their forms differ only in the type of intonation and the relative position of the members of the predication. The only difference in meaning is that between 'declaration' and 'interrogation'. These two meanings can be regarded as the manifestations of the general meaning of a grammatical (syntactical) category which has no name yet. The category shows whether the sentence is presented as a statement or as a question. Let us call it the category of presentation. Like any grammatical category this is a system of opposemes whose members differ in form to express only (and all) the particular manifestations of the general meaning of the category (§ 23).

The meaning of 'declaration' is expressed by a falling tone and by placing the subject before the predicate. The meaning of interrogation is expressed by a rising tone and by placing the structural (part of the) predicate before the subject.

Are you alluding to me? (Shaw). Shall I announce him? (Ib.). Is there no higher power than that? (Ib.). Do you call poverty a crime? (Ib.).

In the last example a special syntactical predicate, the syntactical word-morpheme do is introduced and placed before the subject.

§ 408. With regard to the category of 'presentation' Eng­lish sentences divide into those that have 'presentation' opposites and those which have not. Imperative and exclama­tory sentences mostly belong to the latter subclass. In these sentences the opposeme of 'presentation' is neutralized. The member of neutralization (see § 43) usually resembles that of 'statement' (Go to the blackboard. Let us begin. Look out!) But often it takes the form of the 'interrogation' member (Would you mind holding your tongue? (Hornby). Pass the salt, will you? Isn't she a beauty!) or an 'intermediate' form (How pretty she is!)

Соседние файлы в предмете [НЕСОРТИРОВАННОЕ]