- •Modern english grammar
- •Vyšča skola publishers kiev — 1976
- •Наталия николаевна раевская
- •Предисловие
- •Передмова
- •Foreword
- •Table of contents
- •Introduction
- •Part I. Morphology
- •Part II. Syntax
- •Introduction
- •Early prescriptive grammar
- •Prepositions:
- •Interrogators:
- •Problems of field structure
- •Functional re-evaluation of grammatical forms in context potential polysemy in grammar
- •Grammatical doublets
- •Part I. Morphology Chapter I the subject matter of morphology
- •Chapter II parts of speech problem of classification
- •Chapter hi the noun
- •The article
- •Revision Material
- •Chapter IV the adjective
- •Substantivation of adjectives
- •Revision Material
- •Chapter V the verb
- •Modal verbs
- •In the English Voice System
- •Substitutes for Passive
- •Chapter VI english verb-forms and their pattern-value
- •The Present Tense
- •I. Indicative Modality
- •II. Imperative Modality You go and see him.
- •The past tense
- •The past continuous (progressive) tense
- •Chapter VII the pronoun
- •Chapter VIII the adverb
- •Category of state
- •First Form of the Predicate
- •Third Form of the Predicate
- •Fourth Form of the Predicate
- •1 Ask you this question. Fifth Form of the Predicate
- •I like music. I'm fond of music.
- •I regret it. I'm sorry about it.
- •Chapter X the simple sentence the principal parts of the sentence
- •The secondary parts of the sentence
- •The Attribute
- •The Object
- •Verb-phrases with Prepositionless Object
- •Adverbial Adjuncts
- •Infinitival sentences
- •Ellipsis
- •Verbless two-member sentences
- •Substitution and representation
- •Intensity and emphasis in english sentence-structure
- •Idiomatic sentences
- •Constructional homonymity
- •Chapter XI phrase-structure
- •Subordinate phrases
- •Noun-Adjunct Groups
- •Verb-Phrases
- •Copulative verbs
- •Infinitival, Gerundial and Participial Phrases
- •Participial Predicative Phrases
- •Coordinate phrases
- •Syndetic Coordinate Phrases
- •Asyndetic Coordinate Phrases
- •Chapter XII the composite sentence
- •Coordination
- •Subordination
- •Subject and Predicate Clauses
- •Object Clauses
- •Attributive Clauses
- •Clauses of Cause
- •Clauses of Place
- •Temporal Clauses
- •Clauses of Condition
- •Clauses of Manner and Comparison
- •Overlapping relationships and synsemantics in hypotaxis
- •Transpositions and functional re-evaluation of syntactic structures
- •Problems of Implicit Predication
- •Final remarks on subordination
- •Asyndeton
- •Represented speech
- •Nominality in english sentence-structure
- •Grammar and style
- •Index of grammatical points treated
Transpositions and functional re-evaluation of syntactic structures
Observations on the contextual use of various sentence-patterns furnish numerous examples of re-interpretation of syntactic structures by which we mean stylistic transpositions resulting in neutralisation of primary grammatical meaning. The asymmetric dualism of the linguistic sign1 appears to be natural and is fairly common at different levels of language.
The linguistic mechanism, prosodic features in particular, work naturally in many ways to prevent ambiguity in such patterns of grammatical structure.
Expressive re-evaluation of sentences can be connected with shifts of their syntactic content.
Such is the use of the so-called pseudo-subclauses of comparison, time and condition which in transposition function as independent units of communication. A few typical examples are:
As if I ever told him about it!
Syn. I never told him about it.
Higgins: As if I ever stop thinking about the girl and her confounded vowels and consonants. (Shaw)
Cf. syn. I never stop thinking...
Cf. "Я не писал Вам писем..." "Ну-да", хохотала девица. "Как-буд-то я не знаю Вашего почерка". (Чехов)
"As if it wasn't trouble enough hatching the eggs", said the Pigeon, "but I must be on the lookout for serpents night and day." (Garroll)
"Me, indeed!"—cried the Mouse who was trembling down to the end of his tail.
"As if I would talk on such a subject!" (Carroll)
Examples of pseudo-subclauses of condition functioning as independent units are:
"Well, if you aren't a wonder," Drouet was saying, complacently, squeezing Carrie's arm. "You are the dandiest little girl on earth." (Dreiser)
If there isn't Captain Donnithorne a-coming into the yard! (Eliot) — here the direct and the indirect negations cancel each other, the result being positive (he is coming).
A special case of functional re-evaluation of sub-clauses of condition will be found in "wish-sentences":
That wasn't what he had meant to say. If only he knew more, if only he could make others feel that vision, make them understand how they were duped into hatred under the guise of loyalty and duty. (Aldington)
If only Fleur and he had met on some desert island without a past — and Nature for their house! (Galsworthy)
1 See: S. Karcevsky. Dualisme asymétrique du signe linguistique. TCLP. Prague, 1929.
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In sentence-patterns of this type the idea of the principal clause seems to be suppressed, but they occur so often that at last we hardly think of what is left out, the remaining part becomes a regular idiomatic expression which we must recognise as a complete sentence, an independent unit of communication.
Even without any continuation the if-clause is taken at more than its face-value and becomes to speaker or hearer alike, a complete expression of wish.
Like in some other types of sentence-patterning such contextual variations are not specifically English and may be traced in many languages.
Compare analogous developments in Russian and Ukrainian:
Ax, кабы зимою цветы расцветали!
Как бы мы любили, да не разлюбляли. (А. Толстой)
Ой, якби зимою квіти розквітали!
Sub-clauses of time are syntactically re-evaluated in patterns like the following:
Oh, when she plays!