Phrase and sentence.
учебно-методический материал по английскому языку по теме

Совдагарова Маргарита Рубеновна

One of the important units of English grammar is the section: phrase and sentence.

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Phrase and sentence

Noun Phrases

Often a noun phrase is just a noun or a pronoun:

People like to have money.
I am tired.
It is getting late.

or a determiner and a noun …:

Our friends have bought a house in the village.
Those houses are very expensive.

… perhaps with an adjective:

Our closest friends have just bought a new house in the village.

Sometimes the noun phrase begins with a quantifier:

All those children go to school here.
Both of my younger brothers are married
Some people spend a lot of money.

Numbers:

Quantifiers come before determiners, but numbers come after determiners:

My four children go to school here. (All my children go to school here.)
Those two suitcases are mine. (Both those suitcases are mine)

So the noun phrase is built up in this way:

Noun: people; money
Determiner + noun:
the village, a house, our friends; those houses
Quantifier + noun:
some people; a lot of money
Determiner + adjective + noun:
our closest friends; a new house.
Quantifier + determiner + noun:
all those children;
Quantifier + determiner + adjective + noun:
both of my younger brothers

The noun phrase can be quite complicated:

a loaf of nice fresh brown bread
the eight-year-old boy who attempted to rob a sweet shop with a pistol
that attractive young woman in the blue dress sitting over there in the corner

Prepositional phrases

A prepositional phrase is made up of a preposition and a noun phrase. We use prepositional phrases for many purposes, for example:

- as adverbials of time and place:

We will be back in a few days.
They drove
to Glasgow

.- as a postmodifier in a noun phrase:

Helen is the girl in the red dress
We’ve got a new television
with a thirty one inch screen.

- to show who did something:

The lion was killed by the hunter
I saw a wonderful painting
by Van Gogh

- with double object verbs like give and get:

We gave five pounds to the woman on the corner.
They got a drink
for me.

- after certain verbs, nouns and adjectives:

The book belongs to me.
I
had an argument with my brother.
I feel
sorry for you.

Sentence structure

Simple sentences:

A simple sentence has only one clause:

The children were laughing.
John wanted a new bicycle.
All the girls are learning English.

Compound sentences:

A compound sentence has two or more clauses:

(We stayed behind) and (finished the job)
(We stayed behind) and (finished the job), then (we went home)

The clauses in a compound sentence are joined by co-ordinating conjunctions:

John shouted and everybody waved.
We looked everywhere
but we couldn’t find him.
They are coming by car
so they should be here soon.

The common coordinating conjunctions are:

and – but – or – nor – so – then – yet

Complex sentences:

A complex sentence has a main clause and one or more adverbial clauses. Adverbial clauses usually come after the main clause:

Her father died when she was very young
>>>
Her father died (main clause)
when (subordinating conjunction)
she was very young (adverbial clause)

She had a difficult childhood because her father died when she was very young.
>>>
She had a difficult childhood (main clause)
because (subordinating conjunction)
her father died (adverbial clause)
when (subordinating conjunction)
she was very young (adverbial clause).

Some subordinate clauses can come in front of the main clause:

Although a few snakes are dangerous most of them are quite harmless
>>>
Although (subordinating conjunction)
some snakes are dangerous (adverbial clause)
most of them are harmless (main clause).

A sentence can contain both subordinate and coordinate clauses:

Although she has always lived in France, she speaks fluent English because her mother was American and her father was Nigerian
>>>
Although (subordinating conjunction)
she has always lived in France (adverbial clause),
she speaks fluent English (main clause)
because (subordinating conjunction)
her mother was American (adverbial clause)
and (coordinating conjunction)
her father was Nigerian (adverbial clause).

There are seven types of adverbial clauses:

 

Common conjunctions

Contrast clauses

 although; though; even though; while;

Reason clauses

because; since; as

Place clauses

where; wherever; everywhere

Purpose clauses

so that; so; because + want

Result clauses

so that; so … that; such … that

Time clauses

when; before; after; since; while; as; as soon as; by the time; until

Conditional clauses

 if; unless; provided (that); as long as

Adjective phrases  (See Adjectives).

Adverbials  (See Adverbials).

Verb phrase (See "Verbs - the verb phrase").


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