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Grammar

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Definition Of Nouns

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قم بتسجيل الدخول اولاً لكي يتسنى لك الاعجاب والتعليق.

EXTENDED STRUCTURES OF THE VERBAL GROUP

المؤلف:  Angela Downing

المصدر:  ENGLISH GRAMMAR A UNIVERSITY COURSE

الجزء والصفحة:  P294-C8

2026-06-19

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EXTENDED STRUCTURES OF THE VERBAL GROUP

The features of grammatical meaning which can be expressed in an extended VG comprise the following pairs, of which tense, finiteness, polarity and contrastiveness are obligatory:

tense                                      past, present

finiteness                               non-finite, finite

anteriority                              perfect, non-perfect

aspect                                     progressive, non-progressive

modality                                 modal, non-modal

polarity                                   negative, positive

emphasis                                contrastive, non-contrastive

 

These major features of grammatical meaning represent sets of options between which speakers choose every time they combine elements to form a Verbal Group.

 

The following extract from a story by Raymond Carver in Cathedral uses the options of tense (put, went, opened, came, was) all past; perfect + past (had melted, had gotten), modality + past + negative (couldn’t believe); finiteness: all finite except to get and the participles melted, run, gotten, pooled ( boxed-in is adjectival); all positive polarity except for couldn’t; all non-contrastive:

She put her purse on the table and went over to the fridge to get herself some yogurt. But when she opened the door, warm, boxed-in air came out at her. She couldn’t believe the mess inside. The ice-cream from the freezer had melted and run down into the leftover fish sticks and coleslaw. The ice cream had gotten into the bowl of Spanish rice and pooled on the bottom of the fridge. Ice cream was everywhere.

 

An ‘extended’ Verbal Group structure consists of a lexical verb at the head, preceded by up to four auxiliaries – five if we include the lexical auxiliaries. The order in which the auxiliaries occur is fixed and depends upon the grammatical meanings they convey.

 

The auxiliaries serve to build up the meanings expressed by the modal, perfect, progressive and passive combinations, operating not in isolation but each telescoping with the next, as is explained shortly. In the following examples, we let has and is stand for any form of have and be, must for any of the modal auxiliaries and be about to for the set of lexical auxiliaries.

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