verbs and verb phrases by dr shadia yousef banjar

24
The Class of Verb By: Dr. ShadiaY. Banjar http://SBANJAR.kau.edu.sa/ http://wwwdrshadiabanjar.blogspot.com The Class of Verb & The Verb Phrase Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 1

Upload: dr-shadia-banjar

Post on 12-May-2015

13.343 views

Category:

Education


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

The Class of Verb

By:

Dr. Shadia Y. Banjar

http://SBANJAR.kau.edu.sa/

http://wwwdrshadiabanjar.blogspot.com

The Class of Verb

&

The Verb Phrase

Dr. Shadia Yousef BanjarDr. Shadia Yousef BanjarDr. Shadia Yousef BanjarDr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 1

Page 2: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

The unit sentence can be divided into

two elements: Subject + Predicate.

subject

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 2

subject

predicate

Sentence

Noun Phrase

Verb Phrase

Page 3: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

The girl chased the dog.

Tree Diagram

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 3

Page 4: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

a { } with an [ ] the girl in first position and a [ ] in which

the ( ) chased has another ( ) the dog attached to it.

The first [ ] functions as a SUBJECT,

the [ ] functions as a PREDICATE, in which, the ( ) functions

as a PREDICATOR and

SENTENCE STRUCTUREForm +

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 4

as a PREDICATOR and

the last ( ) functions as a DIRECT OBJECT.

Until this moment, we have been dealing with a SENTENCE

STRUCTURE: Form + ( ).

Page 5: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

the unit sentence can be divided into two elements: a Head, which is realized by a , and the rest of the dependents.

The may have more than one dependent.The two most important dependents are the

Subject and the Object, which are normally realized by .Apart from their different syntactic function and semantic role,

Subjects and Objects differ in their position:(Subjects usually complement VPs in pre-position,

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 5

(Subjects usually complement VPs in pre-position,whereas Objects usually appear in post-position), and

in their relation to (Subjects but not Complements control forms, like in John likes Mary/People like Mary vs. John likes

Mary/John likes people).

Page 6: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

As can be seen, Subjects and Complements (Objects, Subject

Complements, Predication Adjuncts and Adverbials) modify and

complement the meaning of the verb.

John has been eating crisps all the morning,

the meaning of EAT is modified by the following elements:

- the Subject, which specifies the agent of the action (it is John and not

any other person who has been eating),

- the Direct Object, which specifies the patient of the action (it is crisps

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 6

- the Direct Object, which specifies the patient of the action (it is crisps

and not anything else that John has been eating),

- the Adverbial, which specifies the time when the action took place (it

has been all this morning and not yesterday evening).

These modifications are syntactic and external. They are realized by

another type of phrases (NPs in our example). They clearly contrast

with the way tense and number (-s), or aspect (have –en) /(be –ing)

modify the meaning of EAT.

Page 7: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

revolve around their verb.

Of the obligatory elements in a sentence, the main verb is

the one that wholly or largely determines what form the rest of

the structure will take.

This means that, in technical terms, a sentence is a verbal

expansion, and the VP is its head, with all the other phrases

SYNTACTIC ANALYSIS OF VPs

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 7

expansion, and the VP is its head, with all the other phrases

somehow subordinate to it.

Verbs are the words that hold sentences together. Even

though it is not difficult to find a verbless sentence, the

definition of the unit ‘sentence’ requires the existence of a verb

in every sentence.

Page 8: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

Lexical:

– eat, walk, write, give, dream, jump

Auxiliary:

– be, have, do, may, can, will

VERBS

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 8

Page 9: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

Subtypes of lexical verbs

Copula verbs: Copula verbs: Copula verbs: Copula verbs: 1 participant, 1 attribute

Mary is pretty.

Intransitive verbs: Intransitive verbs: Intransitive verbs: Intransitive verbs: 1 participant

[Mary] is running.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 9

[Mary] is running.

Transitive verbs:Transitive verbs:Transitive verbs:Transitive verbs: at least 2 participants

[Mary] likes [cats].

Page 10: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

have usually been classified according to the

number and type of Objects and Complements that follow particular verbs into intensive and extensive verbs.

VERBS

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 10

INTENSIVE EXTENSIVE

Page 11: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

Intensive verbs are those that require a Subject

Complement or a Predication Adjunct.

Examples:

Jane seemed restless.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 11

Jane seemed restless.

The kitchen is downstairs.

Page 12: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

are subclassified into

intransitive and transitive verbs.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 12

intransitive

transitive

Page 13: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

are verbs that do not need any Object

or Complement. Semantically, only one participant is

involved in the action expressed by the verb.

Even after the sun vanished,

Example:

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 13

Even after the sun vanished,

amazement continued.

Page 14: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

In contrast, transitive verbs are verbs that do need some Object or

Complement. They can be subclassified according to the number

and type of Objects and Complements they can take in as:

Monotransitive verbs ,

Ditransitive verbs , and

Complextransitive verbs.

MonotransitiveVerbs

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 14

Transitive Verbs

Verbs

Ditransitive Verbs

ComplextransitiveVerbs

Page 15: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

1. (mono)transitive:

• John ate the apple.

2. ditransitive:

• I gave John an apple.

3. complex transitive:

Transitive VerbsTransitive VerbsTransitive VerbsTransitive Verbs

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 15

3. complex transitive:• Sub. V. DO. OC.

• We consider him our boss.

• We wiped the table clean.

• We elected him president.

• She called me a liar.

Page 16: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

-Monotransitive verbs are those verbs that take one Object.

-Example:

- I saw your picture in the paper.

-Ditransitive verbs are those verbs that take two Objects, a Direct and

Indirect Object;

-Examples:

-Mary sent me a card.

-Mary sent a card to me.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 16

-Mary sent a card to me.

-Complextransitive verbs are those verbs that take one Object and an

Object Complement;

-Example:

-The voters elected Mary.

-Daniel put the book on the table.

Page 17: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

A phrasal verb is a complex verb consisting of a simple verb and an adverb particle.

Examples:

§make up,

§ turn on,

§put away,

phrasal verbs

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 17

§take off,

§fill up,

§run over,

§take in, and

§do up.

§Note that phrasal verbs are different from prepositional verbs.

Page 18: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

A prepositional verb consists of a verb and a preposition.

Examples:

•call on,

• care for, and

•insist on.

PREPOSITIONAL VERBS

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 18

•insist on.

Page 19: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

PHRASAL VERB AND PHRASAL VERB AND PHRASAL VERB AND PHRASAL VERB AND

PREPOSITIONAL VERB: PREPOSITIONAL VERB: PREPOSITIONAL VERB: PREPOSITIONAL VERB:

DIFFERENCESDIFFERENCESDIFFERENCESDIFFERENCES

A prepositional verb differs from a phrasal verb

in many ways.

1) The particle in a phrasal verb is always

stressed, but the preposition in a

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 19

stressed, but the preposition in a

prepositional verb is not stressed.

Page 20: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

2) Phrasal verbs are separable. That is the particle in a phrasal verb

can be moved to the end. Prepositional verbs, on the other hand, are

inseparable.

Examples with phrasal verbs:

§They called up the teacher OR They called the teacher up.

§I picked John up. OR I picked up John.

§He filled the glass up. OR He filled up the glass.

§She turned the lights on. OR She turned on the lights.

Note: The particle in the phrasal verb can be moved to the end.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 20

Note: The particle in the phrasal verb can be moved to the end.

Examples with prepositional verbs:

We called on the teacher. (BUT NOT We called the teacher on.)

We called on them. BUT NOT We called them on.

Note:The preposition in a prepositional verb cannot be moved to

the end.

Page 21: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

3) You cannot put an adverb between the verb and the particle of a

phrasal verb, but you can put an adverb between the verb and the

preposition of a prepositional verb.

Examples:

We called early on the doctor. BUT NOT We called early up the doctor.The adverb early can come between the verb called and the preposition

on in the prepositional verb called on. But it cannot come between called

and up.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 21

and up.

When to separate a phrasal verb?

A Phrasal verb can remain together when its object is a noun or noun

phrase.

Note that phrasal verbs must be separated when the object is a pronoun.

We called them up. BUT NOT We called up them.

(Here the object of the phrasal verb is a pronoun.)

Page 22: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

prepositional verbs are

inseparable

She is looking after

the baby.

This is possible.

She is looking the

baby after.

This is not

possible.

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 22

baby after.

Page 23: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

Prepositional verbs are intransitive verbs

because prepositional verbs cannot take

objects.

For example:

•The art critic looked at the painting.

(correct)

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 23

(correct)

•*The art critic looked the painting.

(incorrect)

Page 24: Verbs And Verb Phrases By Dr  Shadia Yousef Banjar

Source:

•VERB PHRASES AND NOUN PHRASES IN ENGLISH:

A PARALLEL APPROACH,

LUIS QUEREDA RODRÍGUEZ-NAVARRO,University of Granada.•What are Phrasal Verbs and Prepositional Verbs :

http://www.englishpractice.com/grammar/phrasal-verbs-prepositional-verbs/

Dr. Shadia Yousef Banjar 24