Oblique Complement

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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:
  • John put a book on the shelf and Mary did so (*into the drawer), too.
  • 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
  • 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
  • the verb requires a directional phrase, independent of how this is lexicalized:
  • put [sth.]DObj [somewhere]Obl.compl

Categories and structural position