Phrases
Exercise
Draw brackets around each NP and underline its headword. Using Tables
4, 5, and 6, indicate the type of each premodifier and/or postmodifier
that you find.
a. Don’t go out in the midday sun.
b. The cat near the window is Salome.
c. Alvin set the goldfish bowl near the window.
d. I saw the cat near the window. (ambiguous: analyze two different
ways)
e. The squirrel that Bonzo, my pet chimp, chased became quite
flustered.
f. Some friends of Boris gave him a box filled with his favorite candy
as a going-away present.
g. The witnesses at the scene noticed a stranger who drove away in
a red station wagon full of flowers.
Complements in NPs
Complements in NPs typically follow the head N, though some may occur
before it, giving us the formula:
(42) (Complement) + H + (Complement)
The complements before the head may be either nouns or, more rarely, ad-
jectives:
(43) a. a fiction writer cf. someone who writes fiction.
b. an economics professor cf. someone who professes economics.
c. a technical writer cf. someone who writes technical manuals/
materials.
d. a financial adviser cf. someone who advises on financial matters.
e. an ecological expert. (Huddleston and Pullum 2002: 439)
When the complement follows the head N it must be either a PP or a clause:
(44) a. the trip to Disneyland (PP)
b. the claim that the war is justified (that-clause)
c. the question whether we’ve won (embedded/indirect
question)
d. the question ‘Are we there yet?’ (quoted question)