A Student's Introduction to English Grammar

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32 Chapter 3 Verbs, tense, aspect, and mood


[3] IMPERATIVE
ii SUBJUNCTIVE
iii INFINITIVAL


{a. TO-INFINITIVAL
b. BARE INFINITIVAL

Keep us informed tonight.
It's essential [that he keep us informed].
It's essential [(for him) to keep us informed].
He should [keep us in formed].

Imperatives are normally main clauses, and are typically used as directives - the
term we have given for various ways of getting people to do things, such as
requests, orders, instructions and so on. They usually have the subject you under­
stood rather than overtly expressed.
Subjunctives occur as main clauses only in a few more or less fixed expressions,
as in God bless you, Long live the Emperor, etc. Their most common use is as
subordinate clauses of the kind shown in [i i]. Structurally these differ only in the
verb inflection from subordinate clauses with a primary verb-form - and many
speakers would here use a present tense in preference to the slightly more formal
subjunctive: It 's essential that he keeps us informed.
To -infinitivals, as the name indicates, are marked by to. The subject is optional,
and usually omitted. If present it is preceded by fo r, and if a pronoun such as I,
he, she, etc., it appears in a different inflectional form from that used for sub­
jects in canonical clauses and also in subjunctives: compare him in [iiia] with he
in [i i].
Bare infinitivals lack the to marker and almost always have no subject. They
mostly occur after various auxiliary verbs such as should, can, may, will, etc.

The gerund-participle


Traditionally (for example, in the grammar of Latin), a gerund is a verb-form that
is functionally similar to a noun, whereas a participle is one that is functionally
similar to an adjective. English verb-forms like walking are used in both ways, and
no verb has different forms corresponding to the two uses, so we have only a sin­
gle inflectional form with the shape walking in our paradigm, and we call it the
gerund-participle. These examples show what we mean about its two main kinds
of function:


[4] a. She argued against [buying any more of them].
b. She argued against [any fu rther purchases].
II a. People [earning $50,000 a year] don 't qualify
fo r the rebate.
b. [Moderately aUluent] people don 't qualify fo r
the rebate.

[gerund-participle]
[noun]
[gerund-participle]

[adjective]

In the [i] examples the bracketed parts function as complement to the preposition
against. In [ia] the bracketed part is a clause, with the verb buying as its head; in [ib]
the bracketed part is an NP with the noun purchases as head. The similarity between
the verb-form buying and the noun purchases is simply this: they head expressions
with the same function.

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