§ 1 Introductory survey 83
(c) Dependents. There are various kinds of dependent that occur exclusively or
almost exclusively with nouns as head. Examples of such items are underlined in [3].
[3] CERTAIN DETERMINATIVES the door; {! year; every book, which paper
young children, a f2ig dog, recent events
the guy who fa inted, the book I'm reading
ii PRE-HEAD ADJECTIVES
11 Relative clauses
Nouns and concrete objects
The noun category includes words denoting all kinds of physical objects (people,
animals, places, things) and substances: apple, dog, fire, London, sister, water, etc.
We can't use this as the criterion for identifying English nouns, though, because
there are also large numbers of nouns denoting abstract entities: absence, debt,fear,
love, silence, work, etc. But we can use it as the basis for a general definition apply
ing across languages:
[4] NOUN: a grammatically distinct category of words wh ich includes those
denoting all kinds of physical ob jects, such as persons, animals and inanimate
objects.
Types of dependent
Dependents in the structure of the NP are of three main types. We introduce them
briefly here, and then deal with them in more detail in §§3-6.
[ 5 ] DETERMINERS
ii COMPLEMENTS
iii MODIFIERS
the news, {! pear; some cheese, two new films, no reason
the loss of blood, a ban on smoking, the fa ct that she's alive
a young woman, a friend from Boston, people who complained
The determiner is a kind of dependent found only in NP structure. It is normally
an obligatory element in NPs with certain types of singular noun as head.
Compare The door is open and *Door is open, or compare 1 bought {! book and
*1 bought book.
Complements have to be licensed by the head noun - as complements in clause
structure have to be licensed by the head verb. Compare his loss of blood with He
was losing blood. Note that nouns like fa ct, knowledge, or suggestion can be
accompanied by such subordinate clauses as that she's alive, but nouns like boy,
madness, or inquiry cannot.
Modifiers are the default type of dependent, lacking the above special features;
there is no limit to the number of modifiers that can occur in an NP. Those in [iii],
for example, can combine in a single NP: a young woman fro m Boston who
complained.
Nominals
In clause structure we have recognised a unit intermediate between the clause and
the verb, namely the verb phrase. In the same way we recognise a unit intermediate
between the noun phrase and the noun, which we call a nominal. In the guy who