Oblique Complement: Difference between revisions
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<b>Test for identifying oblique complements in English</b> | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>An oblique complement (<b>Obl.Compl</b>) is a <b>PP</b> or an AdvP which behaves like a complement, i.e. it is semantically implied syntactically necessary</li> | |||
<li>cannot be used with a pro-VP form such as <i>do so</i>:</li> | |||
<code>John put a book on the shelf and Mary did so (*into the drawer), too.</code> | |||
<li>it does not fit the definition of any of the other grammatical functions.</li> | |||
<li>typical examples in which the verb restricts the choice of a PP</li> | |||
<code> wait for + N(P)--> wait for you </code><br> | |||
<code> substitute with + N(P)--> substitute plastic with paper</code><br> | |||
<code> rely on + N(P)--> rely on her punctuality</code><br> | |||
<code> talk to + N(P) --> talk to the students</code> | |||
<li>the verb requires a directional phrase, independent of how this is lexicalized:</li> | |||
<code> put [sth.]<b>DObj</b> [somewhere]<b>Obl.compl</b></code> | |||
</ul> | |||
<b>Categories and structural position</b><br> | |||
<ul> | |||
<li>Oblique complements are always PPs.</li> | |||
<li>It is a sister of V and NP and dominated by a VP.</li> | |||
</ul> | |||
Example: | |||
_S_ | |||
/ \ | |||
/ AuxP | |||
/ / \ | |||
subj / VP | |||
/ / / \ | |||
/ / / obl.compl | |||
/ / / | | |||
NP Aux V _PP__ | |||
/__\ | | /_____\ | |||
Pat will wait for Kim. | |||
<br><br> | |||
# [[Predicate | The predicate]]<br> | |||
# [[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> | |||
<div align="center"> | |||
[[Predicate_Complement| ← '''Predicate Complement''']] [[Grammatical_Functions | ↑ '''Grammatical Functions''']] [[Modifiers_(Adjuncts)| → '''Modifiers (Adjunct)''']] | |||
</div> |
Latest revision as of 15:46, 17 May 2019
Test for identifying oblique complements in English
- An oblique complement (Obl.Compl) is a PP or an AdvP which behaves like a complement, i.e. it is semantically implied syntactically necessary
- cannot be used with a pro-VP form such as do so:
- it does not fit the definition of any of the other grammatical functions.
- typical examples in which the verb restricts the choice of a PP
- the verb requires a directional phrase, independent of how this is lexicalized:
John put a book on the shelf and Mary did so (*into the drawer), too.
wait for + N(P)--> wait for you
substitute with + N(P)--> substitute plastic with paper
rely on + N(P)--> rely on her punctuality
talk to + N(P) --> talk to the students
put [sth.]DObj [somewhere]Obl.compl
Categories and structural position
- Oblique complements are always PPs.
- It is a sister of V and NP and dominated by a VP.
Example:
_S_ / \ / AuxP / / \ subj / VP / / / \ / / / obl.compl / / / | NP Aux V _PP__ /__\ | | /_____\ Pat will wait for Kim.