New information tools¶
Constructions for introducing or packaging new information¶
Construction |
Example |
What is introduced? |
Typical discourse function |
Rhetorical effect on the reader |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Existential construction |
There is a problem. |
New entity or situation |
Presentation |
Signals that a new discourse referent is entering the conversation. |
Existential construction (lexical verb) |
There appeared a stranger at the door. |
New entity/event |
Presentation |
Creates a sense of emergence, arrival, or discovery. |
Indefinite NP in canonical clause |
A stranger entered the room. |
New entity |
Introduction |
Directly introduces a participant into the narrative. |
Locative inversion |
Into the room came a stranger. |
New entity |
Presentation |
Builds suspense by presenting the setting before the participant. |
Passive (short passive) |
The proposal was rejected. |
Event; agent omitted |
Topic maintenance |
Keeps attention on the patient and backgrounds or suppresses the agent. |
Passive (long passive) |
The proposal was rejected by the committee. |
Often the agent (the committee) |
Topic maintenance + delayed focus |
Maintains the current topic while postponing potentially important information until the end. |
It-cleft |
It was Ben who ate the cheese. |
New identification |
Focus |
Highlights one element as the crucial piece of information. |
Pseudo-cleft |
What happened was that Ben ate the cheese. |
New proposition |
Packaging and focus |
Builds expectation and then delivers the key information. |
Reverse pseudo-cleft |
What Ben ate was the cheese. |
New identification |
Focus |
Places special emphasis on the complement. |
Extraposition |
It is surprising that Ben left. |
New proposition |
Packaging and evaluation |
Frames the proposition through an evaluation. |
Finite content clause |
I heard that Ben left. |
New proposition |
Reporting |
Introduces information while attributing it to a source. |
Infinitival clause |
To resign now would be a mistake. |
Action/proposition |
Conceptualization |
Presents an action as an abstract topic for consideration. |
Gerund-participial clause |
Ben’s leaving surprised us. |
Event/situation |
Nominalization |
Turns an event into a discussable object. |
The fact is that… |
The fact is that Ben left. |
New proposition |
Assertion |
Gives the proposition authority and weight. |
Reporting construction |
She claimed that Ben left. |
New proposition |
Attribution |
Highlights the source of the information. |
Non-finite Clauses as Vehicles for New Information¶
Non-finite clause type |
Example |
What new information is introduced? |
How is it presented? |
Reader effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Infinitival subject |
To resign now would be a mistake. |
The action of resigning now |
As an abstract proposition for evaluation |
Encourages the reader to contemplate a possible action rather than accept a fact. |
Infinitival complement |
The best solution is to wait. |
The proposed solution |
As an identified course of action |
Presents the new information as an answer or recommendation. |
Infinitival extraposition |
It would be foolish to resign now. |
The action of resigning now |
Through prior evaluation |
The evaluation is processed first; the action arrives as the content. |
Gerund-participial subject |
Ben’s leaving early surprised us. |
The event of Ben leaving early |
As a nominalized event |
Introduces the event as a discourse object rather than as a direct assertion. |
Gerund-participial subject |
Swimming every day improves fitness. |
The activity of swimming every day |
As a general concept |
Introduces a topic for discussion rather than a specific occurrence. |
Gerund-participial complement |
I regret leaving early. |
The event of leaving early |
As the object of an attitude |
Introduces the event indirectly through the speaker’s evaluation. |
Supplementary gerund-participial clause |
Leaving early, she avoided the traffic. |
The prior event of leaving early |
As background information |
Introduces information while keeping the main focus elsewhere. |
Supplementary past-participial clause |
Defeated by the storm, the expedition returned home. |
The defeat |
As contextual background |
Introduces the event without making it the main assertion. |
Bare infinitival perception complement |
We saw him leave. |
The event of his departure |
As perceived fact |
Presents the event as directly witnessed. |
Gerund-participial perception complement |
We saw him leaving. |
The ongoing departure |
As unfolding perception |
Presents the event from within, as a process. |