ENGLISH STATEMENTS
-ADVERBIALS, AUXILIARIES VERBS, PASSIVE FORM, NEGATIVE
SENTENCES, YES/NO QUESTIONS-
By Angie Plata
INTRODUCTION
The English
grammar is the set of rules that make up the
structure of the language, and includes words, phrases, clauses and sentences,
and is important to learn it in order to speaking proper English and be able to
teach it well.
This essay is
based on chapter 8 of unit 2 of language forms and functions course.
The chapter’s
beginning it’s a continuation of the discussion about the syntax of simple
sentences in English. It refers to the three types of adverbial modification,
the form of the verb specifiers (auxiliary phrase, consisting of tense, mood,
aspect and voice), the structure of the passive sentence and the interaction of
passive with verb subcategories are then treated. Then it goes about the
structure of yes/no questions and negatives in English, followed by a
consideration of tag questions and imperative sentences, and at the end finish
with a review of phrase structure rules, grammatical functions, and verb types.
ESSAY
Adverbials are
optional modifiers at the level of the verb phrase and of the sentence level.
The adverbials can be classified according to their
function in adjunct, disjunct and conjunct.
Disjunct
adverbials also well known as sentence adverbials indicates the speaker’s
attitude toward or judgment (seriously, honestly, happily). Unlike adjunct
adverbials, the disjunct ones change the sentence.
Conjunct
adverbials express textual relations serving to link clauses and they have no
function in their own clause (however, therefore, in addition, on the other
hand), and denote a logical connection between the clause that follows and the
clause or clauses that precede.
On
the other hand there are the auxiliary verbs, which are verbs that add
functional or grammatical meaning to the clause to express tense, aspect,
modality, voice, emphasis, between others. The auxiliary verbs usually
accompany a main verb which provides the main semantic content of the clause,
and can be classify as: primary auxiliaries (have, be), dummy auxiliary do,
modal auxiliaries (will, can, shall, may and must) and borderline auxiliaries
(dare, need).
Learning
English we have to identify that sentences can be active or passive. In active
sentences, the subject of the sentence who does the action and the object is
the thing receiving the action.
In the passive
form the thing receiving the action is more important or should be emphasized
(The forgery could have been detected by the art expert – it could have been by
Mike – The Mona Lisa was drawn by Leonardo DaVinci).
Besides to the
above, it is worth noting that in English is not important just learn
declarative and positive sentences, also, it’s important to know too about
negative and interrogative sentences.
A big step
moving toward that goal is learning how to make yes/no questions. Some people
think that English gets complicated when we have to learn this, but if we start
from the declarative sentences, I would be easier.
When the
sentence is “Ricardo is leaving soon”, the YES or NOT question will be: “Is
Richard leaving soon?”. So, if the declarative sentence is: “Hellen can buy a
new house”, the question will be: “Can Hellen buy a new house?”.
In these
questions an auxiliaries movement occurs, so the auxiliaries is, has, can and was move in front of
the subject.
When we need to
build a negative or interrogative sentence from a sentence that doesn’t have
auxiliary we have to use de auxiliary DO (does, didn’t). For example, is de
declarative sentence is: “The children
played football yesterday” the question would be: “Did the children play football yesterday?” and the negative form
would be: “The children didn’t play
football yesterday”.
At last, we find
the tag questions, which is characterized by a “tag” follows the comma and
consists of a tense and the first auxiliary of the main clause or do if there
is not auxiliary, a pronoun identical in person, number and gender with the
subject of the main clause and a marker of negative polarity. For example: “You used to be a lawyer, didn’t you?”, “He
loves to drink water from the fridge, doesn`t he?”, “Allison will be leaving
soon, won`t she?”.
CONCLUSION
We have to stop thinking in Spanish and start to do it in English in order to make it own.
Knowing about grammar gives to the student the opportunity to get into a different world, and get close to different cultures.
With this chapter students will be able to deepen their knowledge about English grammar, first, with adverbials and their classification (adjunct, disjunct and conjunct) and being able to identify everyone.
Also, students will be able to build properly passive sentences, yes or not and tag questions.