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Mixed types of compound predicate




59. Compound predicates can combine elements of different types. Thus we have:

 

1. The compound modal verbal nominal predicate.

 

Jane must feel better pleased than ever.

She couldnt be happy.

He may have been ill then.

 

2. he compound modal nominal verbal predicate.

Are you able to walk another two miles?

We were anxious to cooperate.

 

3. The compound phasal nominal predicate.

 

He was beginning to look desperate.

George began to be rather ashamed.

4. The compound modal phasal predicate.

 

You ought to stop doing that.

He cant continue training.

 

5. The compound nominal predicate of double orientation.

 

Mrs Bacon is said to be very ill.

Walter seems to be unhappy.

Agreement of the predicate with the subject

60. The most important type of agreement (concord) in English is that of the subject and the predicate in number and person. Thus a singular noun-subject requires a singular verb-predicate, a plural noun-subject requires a plural verb-predicate.

This rule of purely grammatical agreement concerns all present tenses (except modal verbs) and also the past indefinite of the verb to be.

 

World literature knows many great humorists.

Great humorists know how to make people laugh.

 

This rule remains true for:

 

a) All link verbs irrespective of the number of the predicative noun, as in:

 

Our only guide was the Polar star.

Our only guide was the stars.

 

b) The predicate of emphatic constructions with the formal subject it.

It was my friends who suddenly arrived.

It s they who are responsible for the delay.

61. The verb-predicate is in the singular if the subject is expressed by:

 

1. An infinitive phrase or phrases.

To know everything is to know nothing.

To be loved and to be wanted is always good.

 

2. A prepositional phrase.

After the meeting is the time to speak.

 

3. A clause introduced by a conjunction or conjunctive adverb.

Where you found him does not concern me.

How you got there is beyond my understanding.

Whether you find him or not does not concern me.

Note:

 

Subject clauses introduced by conjunctive pronouns what, who may be followed by either a singular or plural verb.

What I want to do is to save us.

What were once precious manuscripts were scattered all over the floor.

What I say and what I think are my own affair.

 

4. A numerical expression, such as arithmetical addition, subtraction, division.

Four and four is eight.

Four minus two is two.

Ten divided by five is two.

Note:

 

However multiplication admits of two variants.

Twice two is/are four.

 

5. The group many a + noun.

Many a man has done it.

. (...)

 

6. With there - constructions followed by subjects of different number, the predicate agrees with the subject that stands first. The same holds true for sentences with here.

There was a textbook and many notebooks on the table.

There were many notebooks and textbook on the table.

Here was Tom and Peter.

Here was a man, was experience and culture.

 

In informal style, however, the singular verb is often usedbefore the subject in the plural if the form of the verb is contracted.

 

Is there any place in town that might have them? Theres two.

Both closed.

Theres too many of them living up there.

Theres two kinds of men here, youll find.

 

7. Plural nouns or phrases when they are used as names, titles, quotations.

Fathers and Sons is the most popular of Turgenevs novels.

Note:

 

However, the titles of some works which are collections of stories, etc., may have either a singular or a plural verb.

The Canterbury Tales consist of about seventeen thousand lines of verse.

Turgenevs "Hunters Tales" was/were published in 1852.

Pronouns as subject

62.

1. Indefinite pronouns (somebody, someone, anybody),

universal pronouns (everybody, everyone, everything, each, either),

negative pronouns (nobody, no one, neither, etc.)

take a singular predicate.

Somebody is asking for you.

Nobody has come except me.

Everyone of us is present.

Neither of the students has made a mistake.

Each has answered well.

 

However, none has a plural verb-predicate.

None were here.

None of us understand it.

None of them have come.

All in the sense of has a singular verb, while all in the senseof takes a plural verb.

All is well that ends well.

All that glitters is not gold.

All were in favour of the plan.

 

2. Interrogative pronouns who, what take a singular verb-predicate.

Who has come? What is there?

 

But if the pronoun denotes more than one person or thing a plural verb-predicate is used.

Who are walking in the garden?

Who have agreed to act?

 

3. With relative pronouns the form of the verb depends on the noun or pronoun which is its antecedent.

 

Do you know the girl who lives next door?

(The girl lives...)

Do you know the girls who live next door?

(The girls live...)

Mary is one of those girls who never know what they will do next.

Even I, who have seen it all, can hardly believe it.

It is you who are right. It is I who am wrong.

But: Its me who is wrong.

 

4. The universal pronoun both has a plural verb-predicate.

 

Which of the letters are yours? Both are mine.





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