Lecture 9
Lecture 9
Makhfuza Khidirova
Plan: Subject and
predicate
Sentence-
definition
Simple
sentence
object
Sentence
types
adverbial
modifier
DEFINITION OF SENTENCE
There are many definitions of the sentence and these definitions differ from
each other because that the scientists approach from different view points to this
question. Some of them consider the sentence from the point view of phonetics,
others - from the point of view of semantics (the meaning of the sentence) and so
on.
A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought,
idea, or statement and contains, at a minimum, a subject and a
predicate. The subject is what or whom the sentence is about,
and the predicate explains something about the subject, typically
through a verb or verb phrase indicating an action or a state of
being.
DEFINITION OF SENTENCE
A sentence can The secondary
contain principal parts are the object,
parts, secondary the attribute, and
p a r t s a n d the adverbial
independent modifier.
elements. The independent
The principal parts elements of a
of the sentence are sentence are
the subject and the interjections,
predicate. parenthesis, and
direct address.
Nominative parts of the sentence are syntagmatically connected, the relations
between them can be representned in a linear as well as in a hierarchical
way .linear analysis-
Simple sentences can be:
Simple sentences
unexpanded = elementary
sentence, includes only
obligatory nominative parts;
expanded - includes some
optional parts, i.e.
supplementive modifiers,
which do not change the
simple sentence into a
composite or semi-
composite sentence.
‘He gave me the book’
àunexpanded - all the
nominative parts of this
sentence are required by
the obligatory valency of
the verb to give;
àcf.: *He gave…; He gave
me… - semantically and
structurally deficient.
‘He gave me a very
interesting book’
àexpanded - includes the
attribute-supplement
àvery interesting;
àis reducible to the
elementary unexpanded
sentence
The subject and the predicate are called
headwords. Words attached to headwords
are called adjuncts. They are: attributes,
adverbial modifiers,etc. Syntactically, the
subject is an independent member in a
two-member predication. e.g., These
students are smart. Structurally, the subject
may be simple or complex.
The simple subject may be expressed by
different parts of speech:The noun in the
Common case: The teacher disliked Mary to
talk like that;
1. The pronoun (personal, demonstrative,
indefinite,etc.): I rely on you. That was
interesting. All is well that ends well;
2. The substantivized adjective: The wounded
were taken to the hospital;
3. The numeral (cardinal and ordinal): The first
ran away;
4. The Infinitive: To live is to work;
5. The Gerund: Lying doesn’t go well with me.
6. By a group of words or a clause: The needle
and thread is lost.
The complex subject is usually
expressed by means of predicative
constructions with the verbals that
imply the idea of secondary
predication:
Parenthesis (or Parenthetical Expressions): These are words, phrases, or even whole
sentences inserted into a sentence as an aside
or additional information that is not essential
to the main point. Parenthetical elements can
be set off by commas, parentheses, or dashes.
For example, "The concert last night (which I
almost missed!) was fantastic."
Direct Address: This is when the speaker
addresses someone directly
in the sentence, often
separated by commas. The
name or title of the person
being addressed is
considered an independent
element because the
sentence would still be
grammatically correct if the
direct address were
removed. For example,
"John, please close the
door."
The Enddddddddd!