SEMINAR 1 – SENTENCE AND SENTENCE STRUCTURE (SGEL 2.2 – 2.5; LEG – 1.1 – 1. 21; Chalker – ex. 2,3,4) sentence (subject and predicate) - sentence elements (S, V, O, A, C) - types of verbs (transitive, intransitive, copular) - 7 basic sentence patterns) - phrases - clause SENTENCE “A sentence is a grammatically complete unit.” Q1: Consider the following stretches of language. Are they sentences? e.g. a) Are playing football in the garden. (compare: Hrají fotbal na zahradě.) b) Rained. (compare: Pršelo.) c) The boys. Q2: What’s missing in each one? → to make a sentence in English, we need two constituents: the subject the predicate (= what is said about the subject, i.e. all the words in a sentence except the subject) SENTENCE (CLAUSE) ELEMENTS English grammar, unlike Czech, recognizes as clause elements only those which operate on the level of the sentence structure, whether they are obligatory or optional – i.e. subject, verb, object, complement and adverbial. Czech grammatical tradition also includes the modifying (= rozvíjející, expanding) elements. In English these modifiers are not regarded as clause elements. Q3: Consider the following sentence and try to answer the questions: e.g. The beautiful young woman in the bright red dress is my best friend’s cousin. 1. What is the subject? 2. How many sentence elements are there? In English, we distinguish 5 basic sentence elements: [ S ] the subject is easily identifiable – by asking who?(or what?) – he, children, my mother, someone, her younger brother, the man in the black coat, that new English-Czech dictionary, etc. - the predicate has a few constituents: [ V ] - verb - are playing [ O ] - object - football [ A ] - adverbial - in the garden (=time, place, manner) [ C ] - complement – is used after a copular verb (=a linking verb) e.g. He is clever. E. g. . The beautiful young woman in the bright red dress │is │ my best friend’s cousin. S V C I | don´t know | what he wants. S V O (here the object is expressed by a clause) She |called | him | a fool. S V O C VERBS We distinguish 3 basic types of verbs: a) intransitive – do not require an object, can be followed by an adverbial or stand on their own, cannot be used in the passive! e.g. My head aches. The bus left (early). They didn’t arrive. b) transitive – require an object, cannot stand on their own e.g. I need money. He enjoys swimming. I met him yesterday. *I bought. → I bought it / some food / a new CD. * I like wearing. → I like wearing skirts and dresses. - some verbs can take two objects – She sent me a postcard. – these verbs are called ditransitive x monotransitive – take one object - direct object (4. pád - accusative) – a postcard - indirect object (3.pád – dative) - me c) copular or linking – are followed by a subject complement or an adverbial - the complement to the subject - tells us something about the subject e.g. John is clever. / Mike is an architect./ Your dinner seems ready. (SVC) He was at home. (SVA) most common copular verbs: be, seem, appear, sound, feel, taste, smell + verbs indicating a change: become, go, grow, get, prove, turn !Some verbs can be used both transitively and intransitively: Compare: open The door opened. (SV) v. Someone opened the door. (SVO) answer close SENTENCE PATTERNS - a simple sentence consists of a single independent clause - the clause may contain a few sentence elements - out of the sentence elements we can make 7 basic sentence patterns (types) - subject and verb are obligatory! 1. SV My head aches. / They laughed. 2. SVC My brother has become an architect. 3. SVO My sister enjoyed her holiday. 4. SVOO The firm gave Sam an expensive watch. 5. SVOC They made Sam chairman. (= complement to the object, the verb is transitive) 6. SVA The bank opens at 9. 7. SVOA You can put the dish on the table. - intransitive verbs occur in type SV - transitive verbs occur in type SVO, SVOO, SVOC, SVOA - copular verbs occur in types SVC, SVA IN THE STUDY OF GRAMMAR THERE ARE TWO MAIN ISSUES: FUNCTION AND FORM. In English grammar the sentence is described as having five levels with different units: sentences which consist of one or more clauses, which consist of one or more phrases, which consist of one or more words, which consist of one or more morphemes So far we have analyzed parts of sentences in terms of their function (=sent. elements) Speaking about form, we will identify various phrases in a sentence: A phrase – a word or more words built around the head word a) noun phrase – My watch has disappeared. b) verb phrase - My watch has disappeared. c) adjective phrase – She was a bit doubtful. d) adverb phrase – She answered quite rapidly. e) prepositional phrase – The keys were on the desk. SENTENCE V. CLAUSE In English a sentence is an independent unit, a clause is a unit within a sentence. In Czech we do not make this distinction. The simple sentence consists of one clause. e.g. I was late for school. The multiple sentence consists of two or more clauses. We distinguish two types: a) compound sentence – two or more main, syntactically independent clauses e.g. I was late for school today but the teacher wasn’t angry with me. b) complex sentence – one of the clauses is superordinate, the other (or others) is / are dependent, i.e. subordinate e.g. Although she needed the money, she didn’t accept my offer. Compare the sentences: a) Jane realized her mistake and apologized at once. b) When Jane realized her mistake, she apologized at once.