Complements of The Verbs
Complements of The Verbs
Complements of The Verbs
We can have That, infinitive, gerund, and interrogative complements. Verbs are limited
as to the kinds of complements they can take. Consider, for example, the verbs want,
enjoy and think in the following examples:
Adding to the potential difficulties for English language learners some verbs can take
more than one type of complement. To construct grammatical sentences with
complements, a student must know which kind of complements can appear after a verb.
We will now turn to a discussion of the types of complements in English, focusing on
the verbs that take each type and, at points, including adjectives as well.
That-Complements
Most of the times, That complements are finite clauses- the verb in the clause is
inflected for tense, except when following verbs from a particular subset that we will
see later.
In that they contain a subject and a verb inflected for tense, that complements, the
complement immediately follows the main clause verb. With certain verbs, however, an
NP or to+NP may intervene, as illustrated in:
Main clause verbs that report speech –for example, reply, say and tell occur with that
complements. Also common with that complements are verbs that express mental acts:
believe, comprehend, feel, find, guess, know, see, think and understand.
Certain of these verbs that take that clauses haven been called factive predicates
because their complement is assumed to be a fact. Examples include: bear in mind,
comprehend, know, regret and understand. For native speakers, sentences with factive
predicates are unacceptable when the complementizer is omitted.
b. She comprehended that this would mean a big change in her lifestyle.
Yet other verbs that take complements are distinguished by the form of the verb in the
complement clause. It is to these verbs that we now turn.
A subset of verbs that we can call verbs of request or demand –for example, ask,
demand, insist, recommend, and stipulate- must be followed by a that complement
containing a bare infinitive, as for example:
(7) We recommend that she accept his offer ---Subjunctive form (nonfinite clause!)
Negative raising can occur only with a few main clause verbs, such as anticipate,
believe, expect, imagine, suppose, and think and with several verbs such as appear and
seem with extraposed that complements. With verbs others than these, moving the not
out of the complement would result in a change of meaning, as a comparison of (10a)
and (10b) demonstrates:
Exercise:
Indicate for each sentence whether negative raising can or cannot apply, and if not,
explain why.
Infinitive Complements
Many verbs take to clause beginning with infinitives as complements. These nonfinite
clauses may or may not have an over subject. Infinitive complements can be
subclassified in terms of the verbs that take them. We can identify four types, each of
which follows a particular group of verbs. Complements of the four types differ in
whether they have an overt subject and, if not, what the subject is understood as being.
More specifically, as we shall see, they differ with regard to three questions:
A large number of verbs, such as advise, authorize cause, compel, convince, order,
persuade and tell are transitive, and, therefore, must have an NP object, as in the
following example:
We can confirm that John is the object of persuade thorough passivization, which
moves John into subject position in the main clause:
(12) John was persuaded (by Alice) [to come to the party]
Since John is the object of persuade, the infinitive complement in (11) has no overt
subject. However, John is understood as being its subject. The following sentence
reflects our intuition that the missing subject of the complement is identical to the object
of the main clause (parentheses indicate an understood subject).
(13) Alice persuaded John [(John) to come to the party]
In short, we can characterize sentences with persuade verbs as having the following
pattern: NP1 V NP2 [to V], with NP2 understood as the complement subject.
In terms of their meaning, persuade and the other verbs that take this complement type
have been called influence, or manipulative, verbs because their object is usually
influenced by the main clause subject to carry out the action expressed in the
complement. Usually an animate subject does the influencing or manipulating, as shown
in (11), but this is not always the case. In the following sentences, inanimate subjects
influence the object:
b. A desire to learn more about poetry induced Bruce to seek the advice of his old
English teacher.
The proposition expressed in the complement does not have to be an action. It can be a
state resulting from the influence of the subject on the object, as shown in:
Another group of verbs that include hope, like, promise, and want, either can or must
occur without a following NP, as shown in:
The missing subject of the complement is identical to the main clause subject. What
Joan wanted was that she herself write a letter to the mayor.
Some verbs in this group, including expect, need, promise and want, can also have a
following NP as ahown in (17):
What is the NP following the verb? Notice that if we ask the question What did Joan
want?, we get the answer for Bill to write a letter to the mayor. Thus, the NP Bill is not
itself the object of want but is instead the subject of the infinitive complement, as shown
in the bracketing in (18).
Passivization supports this conclusion. The only way to apply the passive rule to (17) is
within the infinitive complement , so that the complement object, a letter, is moved into
subject position, as is shown in (19a). If Bill were the object of want, the passive in
(19b) would be grammatical, but it clearly is not.
The passive test thus allows us to confirm whether a verb takes a type 1 or a type 2
infinitive complement. With persuade verbs, the passive applies to the main clause, as in
(12); with want verbs it applies to the complement, as shown in (19).
In the case of some want verbs (including arrange, like, love, plan, and prefer) the
complentizer for can appear at the beginning of the complement, as illustrated in (20):
(20) a. We will arrange for your group to have access to the conference room.
Like many other want verbs, promise can also be followed by an NP. A comparison of
the sentence with promise in (22) with the sentences with other want verbs in (17)
reveals the difference.
The NP after promise (i.e., Joan) is clearly the object of promise, and the subject of the
complement is missing but is understood as identical to the main clause subject (Bill).
Thus (22), with promise has the following structure:
-hope: NP1 V [to V], with NP1 understood as the complement subject as in (16);
-want: which has the same pattern as hope verbs and also the pattern NP1 V [NP2 to V],
as in (17).
-promise: which has the same pattern as hope and want verbs and also the pattern NP1
V NP2 [to V, with NP1 understood as thr complement subject as in (22).
In terms of meaning, verbs that take type 2 complements can be said to include
commitment verbs(agree, decline, promise, refuse) and expectation verbs (desir, expect,
hope, want).
Verbs in the believe group typically have animate subjects who take a certain stance (of
belief, acknowledgement, acceptance, etc.) toward the proposition expressed in the
complement.
A few verbs, such as have, let and make, take a complement with a bare infinitive, as
shown in (27). The NP that occurs after the verb is the subject of the complement. Thus,
sentences with these verbs generally have the patter NP1 V [NP2 V NP3].
(27) Bill had/let/made Susan revise the article she had submitted. (bare infinitive!)
Along with get, these verbs are often referred to as “causative verbs”. Semantically,
they belong to the same influence/manipulative verb group as the persuade verbs: their
subjects manipulate someone or something to carry out the action in the complement.
Except for get, however, syntactically these causatives behave differently from
persuade verbs, by taking the bare infinitive.
The syntactic and semantic similarity of make to type 1 persuade verbs may explain one
of the most common grammatical error made by English language learners. Sentences
like *He made me to revise the article result from learners´ follow the patters of
persuade verbs by inserting to in complements following make.
A group of perception verbs (hear, observe, see, watch) also take bare infinitive
complements. And in addition, these verbs take gerund complements as we will study
later.
Although these verbs are not followed by an infinitive complement, they are included
here because learners of English may overgeneralize and apply an infinitive
complement structure to them.
Description/Classification verbs
Naming Verbs
A group of so-called naming verbs, such as appoint, baptize, christen, crown, elect, and
name, take complements consisting of two successive NPs, the second of which names
or designates a title or office that the preceding NP holds. Examples are shown in (29):
EXERCISES:
1.- Indicate for each pair whether the sentences have the same patterns. If they do
not, say why by identifying the pattern types.
From: Ron Cowan (2008). The teacher´s Grammar of English. Chapter 21.