English Grammar: Unit 2: The Skeleton of The Message: Introduction To Clause Structure Module 5: Subject and Predicator
English Grammar: Unit 2: The Skeleton of The Message: Introduction To Clause Structure Module 5: Subject and Predicator
English Grammar: Unit 2: The Skeleton of The Message: Introduction To Clause Structure Module 5: Subject and Predicator
GRAMMAR
UNIT 2: THE SKELETON OF THE MESSAGE:
INTRODUCTION TO CLAUSE STRUCTURE
Module 5: Subject and Predicator
Syntactic Features
- In English, the Subject is obligatory in declarative and interrogative
clauses, but not in the imperative. When two or more clauses with the
same subject are conjoined, it can be omitted, in all but the first one.
Ex: She enterred the room, closed the door and opened the window.
-In declaratives and wh- questions (in which the wh- element is subject),
the subject is placed before the finite verb.
-Subject pronouns (I, you, he, she, it, we,…) realise the subject function
whereas object pronouns (me, him, her, it, us, …) are used as Objects.
Ex: The time had all all passed > The time has all passed.
A. Nominal Groups
These are the most prototypical function of the subject as they mainly
refer to persons and things. They can range from simple heads to
complex NG structures.
Ex: Alcohol abuse can cause liver problems.
The total amount of alcohol abuse related diseases is uncertain.
B. Dummy it
Non-referential or semantically empty use of the pronoun it that occurs in
expressions of time, weather and distance.
Ex: It’s close to midnight.
It’s snowing.
It’s seventy-two kilometres from Toledo to Madrid.
C. Unstressed there
It cannot be replaced by a pronoun but it fulfils the following criteria:
position, inversion with auxiliaries and repetition in tag questions.
Ex: There were only five people in class yesterday, weren’t there?