Modifiers (Adjuncts): Difference between revisions
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<b>Test for identifying modifiers in English</b> | <b>Test for identifying modifiers in English</b> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li>A modifier does not behave like a complement, i.e. it is | <li>A modifier (<b>Mod</b>) does not behave like a complement, i.e. it is | ||
semantically more autonomous, i.e. it makes the same meaning contribution independent of the predicate it combines with.</li> | semantically more autonomous, i.e. it makes the same meaning contribution independent of the predicate it combines with.</li> | ||
<li>syntactically optional</li> | <li>syntactically optional</li> | ||
Latest revision as of 15:54, 17 May 2019
Test for identifying modifiers in English
- A modifier (Mod) does not behave like a complement, i.e. it is semantically more autonomous, i.e. it makes the same meaning contribution independent of the predicate it combines with.
- syntactically optional
- can be used with a pro-VP form such as do so:
- typical examples:
John read a book [in the library]Mod and Mary did so [at home]Mod.
temporal modifiers: at night, after the party,...locative modifiers: at home, in the library,......
Categories and structural position
- Modifiers are usually PPs, AdvPs or clauses introduced by a subordinate conjunction.
- Modifiers are sisters of VP and dominated by a VP; they are not sisters of complements.
- In English, modifiers normally do not stand between the verb and its complement(s).
Example:
___S____
/ \
/ ____AuxP___
/ / \
/ / _____VP_____
/ / / \
/ / ___VP____ \
/ / / \ mod
subj / VP \ \
/ / / \ mod \
/ / / obl.comp \ \
/ / / | \ \
NP Aux V _PP__ ______PP_____ _AdvP_
/__\ | | /_____\ /_____________\ /______\
Pat will wait for Kim at the bus stop tonight.