Tricky terms¶
CGEL¶
In CGEL, you cleanly separate:
form → e.g. PP
function → Adjunct
semantic type (optional) → locative
For words, separate lexical category of the word itself from how if functions in the sentence.
Terms¶
Complement\
A complement is simply a dependent licensed by a head, and the head can belong to several categories.
Not necessarily complement the verb (but often do).
Required (or strongly expected) by the head to complete its sense.
Simple grammar labels roles by meaning or surface pattern (e.g. “linking verb,” “object complement”), while CGEL defines them strictly by syntactic selection and head–dependent relations. So something counts as a complement in CGEL only if it is selected by a head; otherwise—even if it feels semantically important—it is analyzed as a determiner, modifier, or adjunct.
Head └── Dependents ├── Complements (Required or strongly expected, determined by the head) └── Adjuncts (Modifiers, extra info)
Complementizer
A lexical category (a kind of word).
A complementizer is the head of a subordinate clause.
It introduces a clause that itself functions as a complement (or sometimes adjunct).
This is not a CGEL term. CGEL prefers “subordinators”, by their function: introduce subordinate clause, whether as a complement or not.
Mapping “complementizer” to CGEL:
Traditional term |
CGEL term |
Example |
Function |
|---|---|---|---|
complementizer |
subordinator |
I know that she left |
complement of verb |
complementizer |
subordinator |
the claim that he lied |
complement/modifier of noun |
complementizer |
subordinator |
She is afraid that he will come |
complement of adjective |
CGEL treats it consistently — words like that / whether / if is always a subordinator, regardless of whether it attaches to a verb, noun, or adjective, regardless if the subordinate clause is a complement or
Coordinates CGEL term for the subparts linked by coordination. Can be clauses or phrases, like:
Jack and Jill went up the hill
Jill and Jack went up the hill (same)
Determiner Determines or specifies the noun. It’s kinda adjectival in function but not true adjective (you can’t grade it)
Fused relative clause
Fusion occurs when the head of an NP and the relative element are the same word
Gerund
A verb form ending in -ing that functions as a noun in a sentence
Modifier
Optional, adding extra detail.
Nominative case
For most words, the nominative case doesn’t change their form at all. It’s marked only by position (being the subject) rather than by inflection
Noun
Can function as subject, object, and complement
Object
An object is: an NP complement of a verb. Only verbs license objects, and only NPs can be objects.
Crucially:
Category: NP
Function: object
Head it depends on: verb
If any of those fail → not an object.
Participle
A verb form that functions as an adjective (or sometimes as part of a verb phrase).
Participle can form verb tense or a passive voice
It retains verbal properties:
Taking complements (usually even when it’s nominalized)
Being modified by adverbs
You can not identify the tense or if it’s an adjective or noun from the participle itself, without the auxiliary verb or placement in the sentence/clause/phrase
Saw (tense clear, nothing else needed)
Seeing (NP, e.g. singing?)
Seen (AdjP? tensed perfect?)
Nominalized participle is a participle that syntactically functions as noun. Can be modified by an adjective, not by adverb.
Predicate
The part of a sentence (or clause) that tells us something about the subject —usually what the subject does, is, or has.
In other words: Everything that is not the subject.
Clause = Subject + Predicate
Predicate is a clause-level function, not a constituent type. It is not a single node in CGEL tree structure, but a descriptive cover term. The predicate is everything in the clause except the subject.
Pied-Piping\
Moving the preposition with it’s object (the opposite of stranding). The pronoun “pipes” the preposition.
Predicate nominative
A noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb (usually be, become, seem, etc.).
It renames, identifies, or classifies the subject.
Predicator Predicator is a function, not a category. It is assigned to the head verb of a clause.
The predicator is the verbal head that determines the clause’s valency licenses complements
Realised by a VP.
Its head is the lexical verb (or copular verb in copular clauses).
It is the element that licenses complements and determines clause type.
Predicative
A clausal function: a constituent that ascribes a property, state, or role to an NP within the clause. It may be primary, predicated of the subject, or secondary, predicated of the object.
Preposition¶
Some take obligatory NP complements, others take optional NP complements. Some take no complement at all (see list)
Proper noun¶
A proper noun is a subclass of noun that conventionally denotes a unique entity and typically:
Occurs without a determiner
Is singular
Resists pluralisation
Resists restrictive modification
It is a lexical category.
Proper name¶
Proper name = NP used as a name.
A proper name is an NP used to identify a specific entity by conventional naming.
It is a referential notion, not a lexical category.
Possessive adjectives vs. pronouns¶
Adjectives: my, your, their etc
Pronouns: mine, yours, theirs etc
His/Her¶
Her\
Object form: used as an object of a verb or preposition:
I saw her at the station. (direct object)
Give it to her. (object of preposition to)
Possessive determiner (aka “possessive adjective”), used before a noun to show possession:
This is her book.
That’s her crown.
Possessive pronoun: replaces the whole noun phrase:
This book is hers. (= her book)
His/Him\
Object form: I saw him
Possessive determiner: I saw his car
Possessive pronoun: That’s his car
Confusing his/her\
Object form/possessive determiner/possessive pronoun:
Her:
her/hers/her: Same for possessive determiner and object form
His:
his/his/him: his, same for possessive determiner and pronoun
Genitive: “Genitive” refers to case, not to lexical category. Only nouns and NPs headed by nouns inflect for genitive case:
John’s car
Genitive determinatives and genitive pronouns are separate lexical categories.
Dependent genitive is determinative. Independent genitive is a pronoun
This my book (determinative) This book is mine (pronoun)
Interrogative Adverbs¶
why, where, when, how
When - time
Where - place
Why - reason
How - manner
How - Quantity, amount, degree
The quirky “How”
Can be used to ask about matters related to manner (e.g., How quickly?), time (e.g., How soon?), quantity (e.g., How many?), amount (e.g., How much?), and degree (e.g., How good?).
How quickly can you get home? (manner)
How many sweets have you eaten? (Quantity)
Hints\
The answer to a question posed with an interrogative adverb will always be something functioning as an adverb (single word adverb or adverbial phrase/clause)
When should I remove the tin foil from the muffins? Immediately
Distributive determiners¶
determiners that refer to individual members of a group, one at a time or collectively.
each
Each student received a certificate. (Emphasizes every individual member separately)
every
Every child loves to play. (Emphasizes all members of the group, collectively)
either Either option is fine. (Refers to one of two possibilities)
neither Neither answer is correct. (Refers to not one nor the other of two options)
any Sometimes considered distributive in certain contexts) → Any student can apply.