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COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21

COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

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That complements that complements use overt subjects, which may or may not match the subject in the main clause most that complements are finite clauses – the verb in the complement can be inflected Rick knows that the man is a thief. Gary believes that he will catch the thief. The complementizer that can often be omitted Gary believes he will catch the thief. Some verbs in the main clause have a NP or to + NP following the verb I told her that I can't come to class tonight. Shannon said to me that her baby is now walking.

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Page 1: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

COMPLEMENTS

Chapter 21

Page 2: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs

There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which we will be discussing:

that complements infinitive complements gerund complements interrogative complements (not included in this

chapter)

Some verbs can take more than one complement

Page 3: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

That complements that complements use overt subjects, which may or may not

match the subject in the main clause most that complements are finite clauses – the verb in the

complement can be inflectedRick knows that the man is a thief.Gary believes that he will catch the thief. The complementizer that can often be omittedGary believes he will catch the thief. Some verbs in the main clause have a NP or to + NP following

the verbI told her that I can't come to class tonight.Shannon said to me that her baby is now walking.

Page 4: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

That complements The following verbs are used with that complements:

Verbs that report speech (ex. reply, say, tell) Verbs that express mental acts (ex. believe,

comprehend, find, guess, know, see, think) “factive predicates” - the complement following the

verb is assumed to be a fact (ex. bear in mind, regret, understand) Sentences with factive predicates are sometimes

perceived as being incorrect by native speakers when the complementizer that is omitted

?I regret I wasn't able to say goodbye.

Page 5: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

That complements Verbs of request or demand (ex. ask, demand, insist) are

followed by a that complement with a bare infinitive:I insist that you stay for dinner.

Because a bare infinitive is utilized, the verb in the complement is not inflected. This type of clause is therefore considered a nonfinite clause.

Page 6: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

That complements With some main clause verbs, the negative element not may

be moved from a that complement to the main clause without a change in meaning. This is known as negative raising:

I imagine that he won't have any money left.I don't imagine that he will have any money left. Only a few main clause verbs can be utilized with negative

raising (ex. anticipate, believe, expect, imagine, think). With other verbs, the meaning will change:

He forgot that she won't come to the party.He didn't forget that she will come to the party.

Page 7: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements Many complements begin with the infinitive There are four types of infinitive

complements that follow a set of verbs: “Persuade” verbs “Want” verbs “Believe” verbs “Make” verbs

Page 8: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements: “Persuade” verbs

“Persuade” verbs (ex. advise, authorize, cause, convince, persuade, tell) are transitive and must be followed by a NP as its object:

Claire advised Cody to put on a jacket. Because 'advise' is transitive, 'Cody' is the object of

'advise'. However, 'Cody' is also understood as the subject of the complement. (It is 'Cody' that will put on a jacket, not 'Claire')

NP¹ V NP² [to V] (NP² is understood as the subject of the complement)

Page 9: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements: “Want” verbs

“Want” verbs (ex. hope, like, promise, want) either can or must not occur with a following NP:

David wanted to attend the concert. NP¹ V [to V] (NP¹ is understood as the subject of the

complement) When an NP follows a “want” verb, it becomes the subject of the

complement rather than the object of the main clause:David wanted Jacob to attend the concert.

NP¹ V [NP² to V] (NP² is understood as the subject of the complement)

The complementizer for can also be added to the beginning of the complement for some verbs (ex. arrange, like, love, plan, prefer):

Sandy planned for us to be back on time.

Page 10: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements: “Want” verbs

With the verb 'promise', the complement acts the same as it does with other “want” verbs when there is no NP following the verb:

David promised to attend the concert. However, when a NP follows the verb, the subject of the

main clause ('David') is understood to be the subject of the complement, not the object ('Jacob')

David promised Jacob to attend the concert. NP¹ V NP² [to V] (NP¹ is understood as the subject of the

complement)

Page 11: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements: “Believe” verbs

“Believe” verbs (ex. acknowledge, believe, consider, judge) contain be plus a NP or an adjective in their infinitive complements. There must always be a NP following the main clause verb:

I consider Mozart to be an amazing composer. NP¹ V [NP² to be NP/adj.] (NP² is understood as the

subject of the complement) Subject-to-object raising occurs when “believe” verbs are in

the passive voice. 'Mozart', the subject of the complement, becomes the subject in a passive version:

Mozart is considered to be an amazing composer.

Page 12: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements: “Believe” verbs

Subject-to-object raising also changes the subject of the complement into a reflexive pronoun when both the subject of the main clause and the subject of the complement are the same:

Mary considers herself to be a musician. to be can be omitted in some “believe” verb

complements. When they can be omitted varies among native speakers.

Mary considers herself a musician.

Page 13: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Infinitive complements: “Make” verbs

“Make” verbs (ex. have, let, make) have a bare infinitive in their complements.

Susan let her son open the present. NP¹ V [NP² V NP³] (NP² is understood as the

subject of the complement)

Page 14: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Gerund Complements Gerund complements can use overt subjects. When there is no

overt subject, the subject is usually the main clause subject. Some verbs only have gerund complements (ex. avoid, delay,

dislike, enjoy, favor, finish, practice)They enjoy looking at the stars. Prepositional verbs and prepositional phrasal verbs that can

take a clause use gerund complements (ex. agree on, count on, depend on, look forward to, get away with)

We look forward to seeing you again. Verb and preposition combinations with a NP in between can

also take a gerund complement:We thanked the man for finding our dog.

Page 15: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Gerund Complements With some verbs (ex. finish, practice), there is no overt subject in the

complement; the main clause subject is understood as the subject in the gerund complement:

Donna finished writing her homework. With many verbs (ex. anticipate, discuss, enjoy, imagine, mind, risk), the gerund

complement can be with or without an overt subject. When there is no overt subject, the main clause subject acts as the subject of

the complement:We discussed leaving the army.

When there is an overt subject, it can appear in the possessive form or nonpossessive (American English) form:

We discussed his (him) leaving the army.

With some verbs (ex. catch,find, keep, leave) the possessive cannot be used.She heard him practicing the piano.*She heard his practicing the piano.

Page 16: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Gerund Complements With some verbs (ex. advise, advocate, encourage,

recommend, suggest), complements can take a subject. However, when they don't take a subject, the main clause subject is not understood as the subject in the complement. The subject is 'you' or another subject depending upon the context:

The doctor recommends exercising five days a week. Verbs that take gerund complements include:

Interception verbs (ex. behold, discover, catch, come upon, find)

Mental imagery verbs (ex. conceive of, imagine, picture, recall, remember, see)

Page 17: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Practice time

Page 18: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Infinitive Complements

Stative verbs of emotion (ex. bear, detest, dislike, hate, like, love, stand) can take a gerund or infinitive complement and not change in meaning:

He loves to eat ice cream.He loves eating ice cream. Some verbs that describe the start or progression of an

action (ex. begin, start, continue) might have slightly different meanings:

He started climbing the stairs. (the action definitely occurred)He started to climb the stairs. (the action could have happened

depending on the context)

Page 19: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Infinitive Complements

Some verbs that take both gerund and infinitive complements have different meanings for each type

Gerunds tend to imply “a sense of actuality” Infinitives tend to imply “a more hypothetical or future sense”

Remember Followed by an infinitive, it means the subject remembered to

do something before the complement was completed:Mike remembered to take out the trash. (He remembered he had

to take out the trash, then did it.) Followed by a gerund, it means the subject remembers the

complement after it took place:Mike remembered taking out the trash. (He took out the trash,

then remembered doing it.)

Page 20: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Infinitive Complements

Forget Forget usually takes an infinitive. It means the person

forgot to perform the action in the complement:I forgot to wash the car.

When forget takes a gerund, the action did occur. The main clause must have a negative word (ex. never, not) and a modal. This combination describes a special experience for the subject:

I'll never forget playing basketball with Magic Johnson. Without these conditions, the sentence sounds

wrong:*Jane forgot going to the bank.

Page 21: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Infinitive Complements

Try With an infinitive, the action in the complement was attempted

but may not have been carried out With a gerund, the action in the complement was carried outThe dog tried to run away, but Dad grabbed it.*The dog tried running away, but Dad grabbed it.Brian tried hitting the jar against the counter to loosen the lid, but

he still couldn't open it.*Brian tried to hit the jar against the counter to loosen the lid, but

he still couldn't open it. The infinitive can be substituted with try and:Chad is going to try to buy tickets for the game tonight.Chad is going to try and buy tickets for the game tonight.

Page 22: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Infinitive Complements

Stop Stop takes only gerund complements, although it appears to

also take infinitives:Cari stopped looking at the clothes. (Cari didn't continue to look at

the clothes.)Cari stopped to look at the clothes. (Cari took a break from what

she was doing to look at the clothes.)

The second sentence is actually an adjunct of purpose, with the phrase in order omitted:

Cari stopped in order to look at the clothes. Because the infinitive does not follow a verb, it is not

considered a complement. Therefore, stop only takes one complement: a gerund

Page 23: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Bare Infinitive Complements

Some perception verbs (ex. feel, hear listen to, notice, observe, see, watch) can take either a gerund or a bare infinitive complement

A gerund is used when the action in the complement is taking place:We listened to the man giving a speech. A bare infinitive is used to simply report an action that took place:We listened to the man give a speech.

Punctual achievement verbs (ex. blink, hit, kick, slap, snap) A punctual achievement verb in a gerund complement shows a

repeated action in the complement:We saw the boy kicking the car. A punctual achievement verb in an infinitive complement shows a

single action in the complement:We saw the boy kick the car.

Page 24: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Bare Infinitive Complements

Accomplishment verbs (ex. dive, drown) Accomplishment verbs in a gerund complement show an

action taking place in the complement:I saw the boy drowning. Accomplishment verbs in an infinitive complement show

a completed action in the complement:I saw the boy drown. At times, there is little difference in meaning between

either complement, although some native speakers might notice a difference:

We watched Suzi dive into the pool.We watched Suzi diving into the pool.

Page 25: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Verbs that Take Both Gerund and Bare Infinitive Complements

Verbs expressing activities involving physical position (ex. lean, lie, sit, stand) These verbs appear in a gerund complement to show

the state in which they appear:We notice the man sitting on the grass. These verbs appear in an infinitive complement to

show the action taking place:We notice the man sit on the grass.

Page 26: COMPLEMENTS Chapter 21. Complements Complements are subordinate clauses that follow verbs There are four types of subordinate clauses, three of which

Practice time