Clause: content¶
Definition of the content clause¶
A clause that functions as a single argument or complement, expressing a proposition, idea, or statement.
Often introduced by that / if / whether / wh-words
Can act as subject, object, or complement
That she won surprised everyone. (subject)
I know that she won (object)
The question is whether she will come. (Complement)
Function: conveys “what is said, thought, believed, or asked”.
A content clause is not a relative clause. If often functions as a complement, embedded as subordinate subparts.
Possible CGEL form type:¶
Under CGEL they are distinct clause types with different functions, heads, and syntactic behavior.
Declarative content clause → typical:
I know that she left
Interrogative content clause → reports questions:
I wonder who left
Exclamative content clause → reports exclamations:
I can’t believe how fast she ran!
Imperatives are inherently main clauses, they cannot be embedded as a complement
Complete thought¶
It is complete, and express full sentence-like content (unlike a relative clause, that has a gap which corresponds to to its antecedent).
The content clause is a subordinate in the sentence, but it’s a complete thought or idea. It may not stand as a main sentence, but the thought/idea is complete.
I believed [that she has views like ours] until that speech yesterday
The fact [that vaccines work] was treated as unproven propaganda
That thing can broken before [I ever saw it], you know
Properties¶
A subordinate clause functioning as a complement, licensed by the head word (or sometimes subject).
Head can take a clause as a complement, and impose requirements what kind of classed
It does not modify an NP.
It has no antecedent.
Typically headed by a subordinator (that, whether, if) or is bare.
Examples¶
> She believes that he is honest
→ that he is honest = content clause, complement of believes
> That she resigned surprised everyone
→ content clause functioning as subject
Key properties:¶
Replaces an NP (She believes this).
No gap linked to an antecedent.
Not paraphrasable as an NP modifier.
Typically a complement (object)
Can be nested, recursively (subpart of…, which is subpart of… etc)
Jerry says
[that Susan thinks]
[the committe is going to decide]
As subject¶
Can be subject, if the predicate VP has the right sort of meaning
[Whether he will come] is uncertain.
“Whether he will come”: content clause, subject of is uncertain
“is”: copular verb
“uncertain”: predicative complement
[That our neighbors would go to all that trouble] makes me feel glad that I live here
In subject function, content clauses can be optionally extra-posed
It surprised everyone that she resigned (extra-posed subject)
The complementizer (that, whether) remains the head of the clause.
Declarative¶
Using that sbr, Can be complement of:
Verb (believe, think)
Adjective (happy, glad)
Noun (like fact or idea)
Preposition (since, because)
The subordinate is sometimes optional, forbidden after preposition
We think that they were careful*
We think they were careful
We had no idea that they were so careful
We had no idea they were so careful
~~We trusted them because that they were so careful~~
We trusted them because they were so careful
Interogative¶
Like main interrogative, can be closed or open
Closed begins with whether or if
Open with interrogative word like who or what
Various kinds of main clause world
I wonder whether they …
I wonder who they …
It’s unclear whether/who …
I asked him about whether/who …
Don’t have the auxiliary that main interrogatives have before the subject
Don’t actually ask, though close meaning to asking
Exclamatives¶
It’s amazing how strong this stuff is
It’s not an answer to “how strong”, but a comment.