The English Clause Structure
The English Clause Structure
I. Clause Structure
The clause structure is defined in terms of the form-function distinction of its constituents1. The
immediate constituents2 of a clause are phrases.
1. Functional Classification
Subject (S), Verb (V), Object (O), Complement (C), Adverbial (A)
- Most people (S) consider (V) these books (O) rather expensive (C), actually (A)
Whenever there are two objects (such as in type SVOO: the boy(Oi)a glass of milk(Od)), the
former is normally the indirect O, while the latter is the direct object;
Though it is more central in terms of position, in other respects the Oi is more peripheral than the
Od:
- it is more likely to be optional;
- it may generally be paraphrased by a prepositional phrase (to, for) functioning as adverbial
- Mary gave a glass of milk to the boy.
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Notes
1- Constituents: constituents are the smaller parts into which a grammatical unit can be divided.
There are two ways of classifying constituents – on the basis of there form (e.g. their internal
structure, as a noun-phrase or a verb-phrase) or on the basis of their function (as a subject or as an
object of a clause). By ‘function’ is meant a unit’s privilege of occurrence in terms of its position,
mobility (whether it may vary in position), optionality (whether a constituent can be omitted) etc.,
in the unit of which it is a constituent.
2- Immediate constituents are these units which are the parts into which another unit is
immediately divisible. Thus phrases are immediate constituents of clauses, while words and
morphemes are indirect constituents when it comes to clauses (consider the grammatical hierarchy:
sentence – clause– phrase – word – morpheme).
Adverbials are usually considered as the most peripheral element (opposite to verb elements),
because:
- their position is most frequently final
- they are usually optional
- they are mostly mobile
- they do not determine what other elements occur.
Yet, it should be noted that the adverbials form a rather heterogeneous category within which
there are relatively central and relatively peripheral types of adverbials.
- most of the A are mobile and optional:
- There are elements, which are frequently called sentence adverbials, because they tend to qualify
by their meaning a whole sentence or clause, rather than just part of the clause
To my regret, he refused the offer of help. He was, however, very interested in my other proposals.
Unlike space adjuncts, sentence adverbials may vary in position and are not obligatory.
English has strict limitations on the ordering of clause elements (‘a fixed word-order language), but
the more peripheral an element is, the more freedom of position it has.
Type S V O C A
1 SV Someone was laughing.
2 SVO My mother enjoys parties.
3 SVC The country became totally independent
4 SVA I have been in the garden
5 SVOO Mary gave the visitor a glass of milk
6 SVOC Most People consider these books rather expensive -
7 SVOA You must put all the toys upstairs
By eliminating optional adverbials, we arrive at a classification of the essential core of each clause
structure. Of the obligatory elements, the main verb is the one that wholly and largely determines
what form the rest of the structure will take. The above patterns are the most general classification
that can be usefully applied to the whole range of English clauses, whether main or subordinate.
Each clause type is associated with a set of verbs:
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2.1. Intransitive verbs: they are followed by no obligatory element and occur in type SV:
They were dining; they laughed etc.
2.2. Transitive verbs: usually followed by an object (O), occur in types SVO, SVOO, SVOC,
SVOA:
- My uncle gave me the key.
A further classification of transitive verbs can be made:
- Monotransitive: occur in type SVO
- Ditransitive: occur in type SVOO
- Complex transitive verbs: occur in type SVOC, SVOA
2.3. Copular verbs (be, become etc): the term ‘copula’ refers to the verb ‘be’ and copular verbs
are those verbs which are functionally equivalent to the copula; usually, these verbs are followed by
a subject complement or an adverbial, and give the patterns SVC and SVA:
You are crazy! You seem tired.
3.1. Active and passive structures: Clauses containing a noun phrase as object are distinguished
by the fact that they are usually matched by passive clauses, in which the object noun phrase now
appears as subject
I photographed the beautiful sunset. The beautiful sunset was photographed by me).
The transformation is: SVOd to SVpassA. There is number of other possible combinations.
3.3. Indirect object and prepositional phrases: SVOO clauses can be converted into SVOA
clauses:
-She (S) sent (V) Jim (Oi) a card (Od) – She (S) sent (V) a card (Od) to Jim (A)
-She left Jim a card – She left a card for Jim
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4. Formal Classification
For a fuller understanding of the clause patterns, we need to know on what grounds the elements
subject, verb, object, complement and adverbial are identified (as functional elements). Although
these elements are functional categories, their definitions are based also on formal criteria. Thus, it
is important that:
-The verb element can be realized only by a verb phrase
-Subject and objects normally consist of noun phrase
-Complements are usually noun phrases or adjective phrases
-Adverbials are normally adverb phrases, prepositional phrases or noun phrases
There are 5 basic categories of phrase which can function as clause elements (when embedded in
other structures)
Note that adverb phrases and prepositional phrases can exceptionally function as subjects.