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/__\ /__________________\ | /__\ /__________________\ | ||
Pat will write a letter. | Pat will write a letter. | ||
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Read further on other grammatical functions: | Read further on other grammatical functions: | ||
# [[Subject | The subject]]<br> | |||
# [[Complements | The complements]]<br> | |||
## [[Direct_Object | The direct object]]<br> | |||
## [[Indirect_Object | The indirect object]]<br> | |||
## [[Predicate_Complement | The predicative complement]]<br> | |||
## [[Oblique_Complement | The oblique complement]]<br> | |||
## [[Modifiers_(Adjuncts) | Modifiers (Adjuncts)]]<br> | |||
<br> | <br> |
Revision as of 10:05, 4 May 2017
The Subject Test for identifying subjects in English Agreement: In a finite sentence, the main verb agrees with the subject. Pat writes/*write letters to his friends. Tag question: The pronoun that occurs in a tag question refers to the subject. John wrote a letter to his sister, didn't he/ *she/ *they? Subject-auxiliary inverions: In forming a yes/no question, an auxiliary is placed directly before the subject. Will Pat write a letter? Categories and structural position Only an NP or an S' can be the subject of a clause. The subject of a clause S is the NP or S' that is immediately dominated by that S node and that precedes the VP (or AuxP) of the clause. Example:
_S__ / \ subj \ / \ NP ______AuxP________ /__\ /__________________\ Pat will write a letter.
Read further on other grammatical functions: