- •Lecture 4 topic: the verb
- •The verb : its general characteristics. The main verbal subdivisions.
- •4.1.1. General characteristics of the verb as a part of speech
- •4.1.2 The main verbal subdivisions
- •4.2.The main verbal properties: valency, transitivity, objectivity, predicativity.
- •4.3. The main verbal categories and oppositions.
- •The main verbal oppositions
- •4.4. The problem of the category of aspect. The Interrelation of the categories of tense and aspect
- •Interrelation between the category of aspect and the category of tense
- •The general characteristics of the verbal forms
- •4.5.General characteristics of the category of voice. The problem of the number of voices. Peculiarities of English passive constructions.
- •The opposition on the category of Voice
- •. ₪ The point to clarify:
- •5. Can all English verbs be characterized from the point of the category of Voice? The Problem of the Middle Voice
- •The main points of views towards the Middle Voice
- •4.6. The problem of the number of mood in English. The problem of the Imperative Mood. The problems of the Subjunctive Mood
- •Appendix 1 The general characteristics of the verbal forms
Appendix 1 The general characteristics of the verbal forms
№ |
CATEGORY |
VERBAL FORMS |
DESCRIPTION |
1. |
FINITUDE |
Finite
Non-finite |
characterized by all other categories
the Verbals (don’t have categorical characteristics) |
2. |
TENSE |
Present
Past
Future
|
the action takes places at the moment of speaking the action proceeds the moment of speaking
the action follows the moment of speaking
|
3. |
ASPECT |
Simple
Continuous
Perfect
Perfect Continuous |
—
The processual contents
The processual limit
The processual contents which leads to the processual meaning
|
4. |
VOICE |
Active
Passive
|
|
5. |
MOOD |
Indicative
Imperative
Subjunctive
|
the action taken by the speaker as the real fact
the inducement to fulfilling some action taken by the speaker as not real but desirable.
The action taken by the speaker as supposed or possible. |
6. |
PERSON |
1 2 3 |
In most case the forms correspond to each other but the present forms (+past cont) where the 3rd person singular is characterised by obtaining either specific forms (am, is, has, was) or specific s(es) inflexions in the 3rd person singular. |
7. |
NUMBER |
Singular / Plural |
Above |
APPENDIX 2
THE SPECIFIC FEATURES OF THE CATEGORIES OF PROSPECT AND PRIMARY TIME
They distinguish two temporal planes: the plane of the present and the plane of the past, which affects also the future forms. Very important in this respect is the structural nature of the expression of the category: the category of primary time is the only verbal category of immanent order which is expressed by inflexional forms. These inflexional forms of the past and present coexist in the same verb-entry of speech with the other, analytical modes of various categorial expression, including the future.
Jill returns from her driving class at five o'clock.
At five Jill returned from her driving class. I know that
Jill will return from her driving class at five o'clock.
I knew that at five Jill would return from her driving class.
The present tense as the verbal form of generalised meaning covers all these denotations, showing the present time in relation to the process as inclusive of the moment of speech, incorporating this moment within its definite or indefinite stretch and opposed to the past time.
The category of prospect is also temporal, in so far as it is immediately connected with the expression of processual time, like the category of primary time. But the is different in principle from that of the category of primary time: while the primary time is present-oriented, the prospective time is purely relative; it means that the future form of the verb only shows that the denoted process is prospected as an after-action relative to some other action or state or event, the timing of which marks the zero-level for it.
The two times are presented, as it were, in prospective coordination: either present or past. As a result, the expression of the future receives the two mutually complementary manifestations: one manifestation for the present time-plane of the verb, the other manifestation for the past time-plane of the verb.
Apart from shall/will + Infinitive construction, there is another construction in English which has a potent appeal for being analysed within the framework of the general problem of the future tense. This is the combination of the predicator be going with the infinitive. Indeed, the high frequency occurrence of this construction in contexts conveying the idea of an immediate future action can't but draw a very close attention on the part of a linguistic observer.
The combination may denote a sheer intention (either the speaker's or some other person's) to perform the action expressed by the infinitive, thus entering into the vast set of "classical" modal constructions. E.g.:
I am going to ask you a few more questions about the mysterious disappearance of the document, Mr. Gregg.
You are trying to frighten me. But you are not going to frighten me any more (L. Hellman).
The oppositional basis of the category of prospective time is neutralised in certain uses, in keeping with the general regularities of oppositional reductions. The process of neutralisation is connected with the shifting of the forms of primary time (present and past) from the sphere of absolute tenses into the sphere of relative tenses.
One of the typical cases of the neutralisation in question consists in using a non-future temporal form to express a future action which is to take place according to some plan or arrangement. Cf.:
The government meets in emergency session today over the question of continued violations of the cease-fire. I hear your sister is soon arriving from Paris? Naturally I would like to know when he's coming. Etc.
This case of oppositional reduction is optional, the equivalent reconstruction of the correlated member of the opposition is nearly always possible (with the respective changes of connotations and style). Cf.:
... → The government will meet in emergency session. ... → Your sister will soon arrive from Paris? ... → When will he be coming"?
Another type of neutralisation of the prospective time opposition is observed in modal verbs and modal word combinations. The basic peculiarity of these units bearing on (he expression of time is, that the prospective implication is inherently in-built in their semantics, which reflects not the action as such, but the attitude towards the action expressed by the infinitive. For that reason, the present verb-form of these units actually renders the idea of the future (and, respectively, the past verb-form, the idea of the future-in-the-past). Cf.:
There's no saying what may happen next. At any rate, the woman was sure to come later in the day. But you have to present the report before Sunday, there's no alternative.
APPENDIX 3
THE EXAMPLE OF MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF VERBS
I HAVE BEEN STUDYING English for seven years already
I. The given form — the initial form |
HAVE BEEN STUDYING — TO STUDY |
II. The presented morphological properties |
|
а) structural classification |
simple |
b) semantical classification |
Full nominative value |
c) lexico-functional classification |
actional |
d) morphological |
standard , unlimitive |
e) syntactical |
transitive, objective
|
III. The presented grammatical categories |
|
а) finitude |
finite |
b)tense |
present |
c) aspect |
Perfect continuous |
d) mood |
indicative |
e) voice |
active |
f) number |
singular |
g) person |
the first person |
h) form |
independent |
IV. The presented syntactical properties |
|
а) the type of combinability |
V+N |
и) function in the sentence |
predicate |