Structure of EnglishLET
Structure of EnglishLET
Structure of EnglishLET
WHAT TO EXPECT
SPECIALIZATION: ENGLISH
LET Competencies:
Prepared by:
Alice M. Karaan
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1. N be Adj
where the adjective is a subject complement, in particular a predicate adjective. The
adjective refers back to the subject. The copula verb be means “may be described as.”
2. N be UW (= uninflected word),
where the uninflected word is an ADVERBIAL such as here, there, up, down, in, out, inside,
upstairs, downstairs, on, off, now, then, yesterday, and tomorrow. Be has the meaning of
“be located” or “occur.”
3. N1 be N1
where the superscript means that the two nouns have the same referent. The second noun
following the be verb is also a subject complement, in particular a PREDICATE NOUN or PREDICATE
NOMINATIVE.
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Glasses break.
5. N1 TrV (= transitive V) N2
where N2 does not have the same referent as N1. N2 is called the direct object of the verb,
“the receiver of the action.”
6. N1 TrV N2 N3
where the superscripts 1, 2, and 3 indicate that each noun has a different referent.
Mother gave a gift to the orphan. (usually reads as Mother gave the orphan a gift.)
Two noun objects occur after the verb. Still N2 is the direct object and N3 is the indirect object. If we
omit the last noun, the pattern is identical to that in item 5. Note that the indirect object is preceded by
the preposition to (sometimes for or of). If the two objects are inverted, the preposition disappears.
7. } N2
}Adj
}Pronoun
N1 TrV N2 }Adv (of place), uninflected
}Verb, present participle
}Verb, past participle
There are a choice of different forms in sentence final position. These are illustrated as follows:
The most common illustration of this sentence pattern is one with the occurrence of a final N 2.
NOUNS
2. They have two inflections, the plural {-es} and the possessive (sometimes called the genitive)
{-‘s}. Both inflections have various allomorphs
/əz/ appears after morphs ending in sibilants or affricates / s, z, š, ž, č j /
/s/ appears after morphs ending in voiceless consonants / p, t, k, f, Ɵ /,
except the sibilants and affricate / s, š, č /
/z/ appears after morphs ending in vowels and voiced consonants / b, d, g, v,
ð, m, n, ŋ, l, r. y, w /, except the sibilants and the affricate / z, ž, j /
3. They may be marked by noun-forming derivational suffixes added to bases or stems, usually belong
to other parts of speech, e.g.
added to verbs
{-age} breakage
{-ee} employee
added to adjectives
{-ity} facility
{-ness} happiness
added to other nouns
{-cy} advocacy
{-ian} librarian
{-ship} friendship
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4. They fill certain characteristic positions in relation to other parts of speech in phrases and
sentences.
just before a verb
Red roses bloom in my garden.
after determiners such as articles, demonstratives, and possessive adjectives, e.g. the
examination, these reviewees, my handouts
5. Unlike other languages, gender is not an important feature of English grammar. Gender is only
marked in certain pairs of nouns, e.g. waiter/waitress, host/hostess
6. Certain superfixes occasionally identify nouns from other parts of speech as in: récòrd and rècórd.
These two words are morphemically alike; however, we identify the stress pattern / ˊ ˋ / as a noun.
7. Nouns can serve as heads in a noun phrase. As heads they may be preceded by one or more single-
word modifiers and followed by a phrasal or clausal modifier or both
the small study table in my room which my father bought
Functions of Nouns
Noun Types
3. collective nouns: able to take either singular or plural verbs forms, depending on the
interpretation given to the noun, i.e, whether it is seen as a unit or as a collection of
individuals
The team has won all its games.
The team have won awards in their respective events.
ARTICLES
Articles are a subclass of determiners, which are noun-marking words. They usually come
before the nouns they modify.
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class The history of his town
a dog (a domestic
animal)
3 Before a predicate N Before superlatives and To refer to an indefinite
after a be verb if no before ordinal numbers, number but not
determiner is used except ordinal numbers necessarily to all
. . . is a good used alone (first in her members of a class.
neighbor batch) 0Seedlings are
The best cake I have ever beginning to sprout.
seen (many)
The first person to fly in
space
4 With UNs to mean Content know to both writer With plural nouns after
mean a kind of, or and reader be.
with kind of, or The chapel in the village His brothers are
certain (only one chapel) 0engineers.
a smile
an insight
5 Before few and little Identification of a class, With institutions and
to mean some but especially in a practices felt to be
not many generalization, unique
followed by a noun, or an 0Offices open at 7
adjective o’clock.
The youth is the hope of the 0Dinner is usually late.
future.
the physically challenged
6 When using a proper Beginning of a phrase With set phrases,
noun to indicate the containing an appositive usually pairs
characteristics of Interpret this item, the one 0Heaven and hell
the person named with an illustration
She is a Sister
Teresa. (a saintly
person)
7 To name “a certain With prepositional
person whose name phrases
is.” 0At rest, in danger, on
A Mr. Alba came to time
see you.
8 With nouns used in
headlines in
newspapers, captions in
books, signs, labels and
the like
0MURDERER ESCAPED
BEWARE OF 0DOG
9 For a family name in the With common nouns used
plural as terms of address and
The Basas have arrived. therefore capitalized.
We are ready to go,
0Mother.
10 To distinguish people who
have the same name
The Jessica Reyes who
joined the beauty pageant
is not the Jessica Reyes
who is my cousin.
11 When the article is part of
a geographical name
The Philippines
The United States
The Red Sea
12 When the article is
accepted as part of any
kind of proper name
The Philippine Star
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The Princess of Negros
The Hilton
The University of St.
Tomas
The United Nations
PRONOUNS
Most pronouns stand for, refer to, or replaces a noun or a noun phrase within a text; hence, they
occupy the same position as a noun or noun phrase does. The word or words that a pronoun stands for
are its antecedent or reference.
My brother holds dual citizenship. He is not only a Filipino but also a Canadian citizen.
Pronouns can also be a direct reference to an outside situation (e.g., “What is that?” in response to a
sound or noise).
Kinds of Pronouns
There are many different kinds of pronouns: subject, object, possessive, reflexive, demonstrative and
others. The forms within each category are distinguished by number (singular/plural), person
(first/second/third) gender (masculine/feminine/
neuter), and in the case of demonstratives, by number and proximity.
Things to remember:
1. Animals closely related to people can be referred to by he, him, and his or she, her, and hers.
2. Use it and its to refer to inanimate objects except ships, which are always referred as she.
3. Countries and schools are sometimes referred matter are sometimes referred to by she or her.
4. Traditionally, the pronouns he, him, and his have been used for mixed groups or groups in which
the sex is unknown. Many people now object to this use, so they use both the masculine and
feminine forms or the plural forms to avoid the problem.
Everybody submitted his or her assignment. (awkward)
All the students submitted their assignments. (acceptable)
5. If I, me, my or mine or their plural counterparts are part of a pair or a series, put them last.
The teacher confiscated his toy and mine, too.
Father helped Tony with his project, and he will help my sister and me with ours
tomorrow.
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Reflexive Pronouns
1. Use the reflexive pronoun as the object of the verb form or preposition to refer to the subject of
the sentence.
2. The phrase by + self or its emphatic form all by + self means alone or without any help.
Intensive Pronouns
The intensive form occurs directly after the word it modifies or at the end of the clause.
Reciprocal Pronouns
1. The reciprocal pronoun forms are each other and one another. They means that each part of the
subject did the action and also received the action.
3. Some prefer to use each other for two people or things and one another for more than two.
The two finalists congratulated each other for making it to the top.l
The class members prepared surprise gifts for one another during the Christmas party.
Demonstrative Pronouns
2. Demonstrative pronouns can show distance or contrast not connected with distance.
Indefinite Pronouns
Use singular verbs with compound pronouns and use singular pronouns to refer to them in formal
writing.
Relative pronouns
1. Relative pronouns (sometimes called clause markers) introduce dependent clauses (also called
relative clauses).
2. Relative pronouns used in adjective clauses are who, whom, whose, which and that.
3. Who, whom, and whose are used for persons while which is used for non-persons.
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The guest who came to dinner is the governor.
The book which I bought is a best seller.
4. That is a neutral form. It can be marked +human or –human. In other words, it can be a
substitute for both who (+human) or which (-human).
6. That, which and whom are the only relative pronouns that can be left out.
The instrumental music (that) I like to hear often is that of Zamfir.
The house pests (which) I hate to see are the rodents and the cockroach.
7. Who, whom, and whose can be used in both essential and nonessential clauses.
8. That instead of which is used only in essential or restrictive clauses, so do not put commas
around clauses beginning with that.
*The poster, that won first prize, pleased both the judges and the viewers.
9. Use which in nonessential or nonrestrictive clauses. Separate nonessential clauses from the rest
of the sentence by commas.
Our car, which has been running for three days, should be brought to the machine shop
for check-up.
10. Relative pronouns used in noun clauses are that, what, whatever, whoever,
whomever, and whichever.
Whatever you offer will be appreciated. (noun clause as subject)
He will befriend whoever he gets acquainted with. (noun clause as direct object)
11. Look at the antecedent of who, that or which when used as subject to decide
whether the verb following should be singular or plural.
The painting which is exhibited is the painter’s masterpiece.
The farmers who own orchards earn much from their harvest.
PREPOSITIONS
Prepositions are notoriously difficult for ESL learners for several reasons.
1. Several English prepositions are realized as a single form in the learner’s first language.
2. The English preposition is not necessarily realized by a single word. There are complex forms
like because of and in spite of or coalesced forms like into and onto.
3. Certain prepositions co-occur with verbs, adjectives, and nouns to form clusters.
to substitute for to be afraid of
in favor of awareness of
Meanings of Prepositions
1. Many prepositions prototypically deal with locating objects in space involving two or more
entities. One entity is for foregrounding, while the other serves as background. The former is
the figure and the latter is the landmark. In
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at on in
by through
with
under
↕ ↕ ↕ about
over
from off out of
Adapted - Dirven 1993
At, on, and in are the basic and most general place prepositions. At denotes place as a point
of reference, on denotes physical contact between the figure and landmark, and in denotes
the enclosure of the trajector in the landmark.
From, off, and out of are source prepositions involving the notion of separation from place.
From denotes separation from a point of orientation, off denotes separation from contact
with line or surface, and out of, separation from inside a landmark.
By and with are proximity prepositions, which locate the figure in relation to a point of
orientation marked by the preposition at. By denotes the idea of “connection” while with
denotes both a point of orientation and the idea of connection. In its spatial sense, with can
occur only with animate nouns as landmark.
Through and about require the landmark to the seen as a surface or a volume and are there
positioned in the diagram above next to in. Through structures space as a tunnel or channel.
About denotes spatial movement in any direction.
Under and over are vertical space preposition. Under denotes a figure at a lower point than
the landmark. Over denotes a figure that is at a higher point than the landmark.
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Variations in Use of Prepositions
VERBS
Denotes an action (e.g., read) or a state of being (e.g. know). Action verbs are dynamic. State of
being verbs (or stative verbs) include the copula or linking verbs, e.g. the be-verbs, remain,
appear, and become.
The third person singular –s has the same allomorphs as the noun plural and the noun
possessive.
The –ed past tense inflection has three allomorphs:
- / əd / after morphs which end in / t / or / d / as in planted, raided
- / t / after morphs that end in voiceless sounds except / t / as in
brushed, jumped, walked
- / d / after morphs which end in voiced sounds except / d / as in cleaned, grabbed,
agreed
Follows a subject noun and may be followed in turn by adjectives
Have tense and aspect qualities. Tense and aspect have to do with form. TENSE is “the
grammatical marking on verbs that usually indicates time reference relative to either the time of
speaking or the time at which some other situation was in force” (Jacobs 1995). Time reference
has to do with meaning. Events and situations are located in time, perhaps to our speaking
about them, perhaps while we are speaking about them, or perhaps at some later time. English
has three tenses – present, past, and future. The present and the past tenses have inflectional
markings, while the future is marked by the inclusion of the modals will or shall. Simply put,
tense is a set of verb forms that indicate a particular point in time or period of time in the past,
present, or future.
ASPECT is a general name given to verb forms used to signify certain ways in which an event is
viewed or experienced. Aspect can view an event as completed whole (simple), or whether or
not it has occurred earlier (perfect aspect) or is still in progress (progress).
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Noel has attended the review classes. (perfect)
Now he is studying for the LET exam. (progressive)
The tenses in combination with aspects make up the following 12 tense-aspect categories.
These make up the traditional 12 tenses.
Sometimes, if we want to draw attention to the time of the action, we use an ADJUNCT OF TIME,
which can be an adverb, a noun group, or a prepositional phrase, e.g..:
b. To talk about a settled state of affairs which includes the present moment
He lives in Sagada now.
Our teacher is very competent and considerate. We like her very much.
d. To talk about something that a particular person or thing does regularly or habitually.
I get up early to take a bath.
Every Sunday, I attend church services.
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a. To say that an event occurred or that something was the case at a particular time in the
past.
The university officials flew into Jakarta last week to sign a memorandum of
agreement with a sister school.
c. To talk about an activity that took place regularly or repeatedly in the past, but which no
longer occurs
We swam in the river a great deal in my childhood.
3. Simple future: An expression of what we think might happen or what we intend to happen
a. To say that something is planned to happen, or that we think it is likely to happen in the
future
What do you think Ella will do to fix it?
b. To talk about general truths and to say what can be expected to happen if a particular
situation arises
An attack of dengue fever can keep a man off work for a few days. He will earn
nothing and he have trouble paying his hospital bills.
3. Future Perfect
To refer to something that has not happened yet, but will happen before a particular time
in the future.
By the time he graduates, his parents will already have left for New Zealand
d. To talk about a habitual action that takes place regularly, especially one which is new or
temporary
She’s spending a lot on clothes these days.
b. To contrast a situation with an event which happened just after that situation existed. We
use the past continuous to describe the first event and the simple past to describe the
event which occurred after it.
We were standing at the main gate waiting to welcome the guest speaker. He
arrived 20 minutes later.
3. Future progressive
a. To say something will surely happen because arrangements have been made
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They will be sending their students regularly to the University for English
proficiency enhancement.
Perfect-Progressive Aspect
b. To say that something was expected, wished for, or intended before a particular time in
the past.
I had been expecting a phenomenal rise in his political career.
1. Verb phrase/verb complex: consists of an auxiliary + a main verb, e.g., must work, have been
reading, will be informed. The word or words in boldface are the auxiliary or help verbs.
2. Auxiliary/helping verbs
3. Operators/operator verbs
The operator is a verb that has three main functions: 1) It precedes the negative and
combines with it when the negative is contracted to –n’t; 2) It is the verb that moves
around the subject to the sentence initial position in yes-no questions; and 3) It is also
the verb that appears in the tag phrases of interrogative sentences or tag questions.
My father will not approve your marriage proposal.
My father won’t approve your marriage proposal.
Will your father approve my marriage proposal?
Will your father not approve my marriage proposal?
Won’t your father approve my marriage proposal?
Your father will approve my marriage proposal, won’t he?
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When a clause contains no verb eligible to be an operator, do is introduced.
He attends the graduation ball tonight.
He does attend the graduation ball tonight.
He does not attend the graduation ball tonight.
Does he attend the graduation ball tonight?
He attends the graduation ball tonight, doesn’t he?
If there are two auxiliary or more auxiliary verbs present in the verb phrase, the first
auxiliary serves as the operator.
He has been reading the Obama autobiography.
He has not been reading the Obama autobiography.
*He has been not reading the Obama autobiography.
Has he been reading the Obama autobiography.
He has been reading the Obama autobiography, hasn’t he?
1. Collective nouns may take either a singular or plural verb inflection depending on the meaning.
Conceived of a one entity – takes singular verb
Our school team has won its games.
Conceived of as more than one entity or refers to individual membership – takes plural verb
Our school team have won all their games.
2. Some common and proper nouns ending in –s, including –ics nouns and certain diseases are always
conceived as single entity – take a plural verb.
The recent news is exciting.
Mathematics is repelling to many students.
Measles is a contagious disease.
The United States is still a powerful country.
3. Titles of works even when plural in form are conceived of as single entitles.
The Ten Commandments is a beautiful movie.
The Syntax Files is good reading for those in linguistics.
The song Greenfields brings nostalgia to people of my generation.
4. Nouns occurring in sets of two take the singular when the noun pair is present but take the plural
when pair is absent.
That pair of Lee jeans is expensive.
My glasses are missing.
5. Fractions and percentages takes a singular verb inflection when modifying a noncount noun and the
plural verb when they modify a plural noun. Either a singular or plural verb inflection may be used when
they modify a collective noun, depending on the speaker’s meaning.
More than half of the cake is eaten.
Twenty percent of the students are not joining the field trip.
One-fourth of the audience is/are teachers.
6. A number normally takes the plural. The number takes the singular.
A number of parents are coming for the meeting.
The number of signatories is substantial to merit approval of the motion.
7. When we use a number and a plural noun to talk about two or more things, we usually use a plural
verb. We use a singular verb with ‘one’.
Seven days make up a week.
One solid evidence is enough to prove his dishonesty.
8. When we are talking about an amount of money or time, or a distance, speed, or weight, we usually
use a number, a plural noun, and a singular verb.
Five hundred dollars is a lot of money.
Three years is a long time to wait for a family member from abroad to come home.
Eighty kilometers per hour of travel is quite risky on slippery roads.
Seventy-five pounds is all she weighs now.
9. Arithmetic operations take the singular because they are perceived as reflecting a single numerical
entity on both side of the equation or equal sign.
Two plus two is/equals four.
10. The quantifiers a lot (of), lots of, plenty of take a singular verb if the subject noun is noncount by
plural verb if the subject head noun is plural.
A lot of sound views were advanced during the discussion.
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A lot of nonsense is evident from uninterested participants.
11. Traditional grammar states that when used as a subject, none (meaning not one) is always singular
regardless of what follows in a prepositional phrase.
None of the boys joins the mountaineering group.
None of rice is eaten at all.
12. Traditional grammar maintains that the antecedent of the relative pronoun is the noun before.
Alice is one of the graduate students who have finished her master’s degree in a short
period of time.
13. For correlatives either . . . or and neither . . . nor, traditional grammar argues for a proximity rule,
i.e., subject-verb agreement should occur with the subject noun nearest to the verb.
Either my friend or my classmates are expected to help me with my project.
Neither my classmates nor my friend volunteers to lend support.
14. A singular noun or pronoun should take a singular verb inflection regardless of what else occurs
between the subject and the verb.
Jimmy, along with his co-teachers, conducts a cleanliness campaign in the barangay.
VOICE
VOICEpertains to who or what serves the subject in a clause. In the active voice, the subject of a clause
is most often the agent, or doer, of some action. In the passive voice, the subject of a clause is the
receiver or undergoer of the action. The passive “defocuses” the agent. (Shibitani 1985 in Celce Murcia
and Larsen-Freeman 2001)
The passive voice is more limited than the active in that it requires only the transitive verbs – verbs
that take direct objects.
The passive morphology is be . . . –en, i.e., a form of the be verb + the past participle. Usually in
passive sentences the agent is not mentioned at all, referred to as the agentless passive. If the agent is
mentioned (= agented passive), it appears in a prepositional phrase marked by the preposition by.
1. A passive construction emphasizes the result in an impersonal style. This use is sometimes
desirable in scientific and technical writing.
A new strain of malaria was discovered.
3. Use the passive when the agent or the actor is so unimportant or obvious that you do not need
to mention it.
Rica was born in Seychelles.
4. Use a passive verb if you want to hide the name of the person who is responsible for an
unpleasant decision or result.
An increase in tuition fees was proposed.
When to use the passive presents the greatest challenge to ESL learners.
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Paper is produced from trees. (simple present)
Paper was produced from trees. (simple past)
PHRASAL VERBS
These are verbs which consist of two or three words. They consists of:
1. a verb followed by an adverb;
go up, spill over, push through
2. a verb followed by a preposition; or
come upon, reckon with, bank on
3. a verb followed by an adverb and a preposition
break out of, look forward to, go along with
1. intransitively
Why don’t you speak up?
2. transitively
Let’s cut pollution down to conserve our environment
3. both intransitively and transitively
A plane took off.
She took her coat off because it was warm.
Meaning
A two-word verb often has a one-word synonym, which is generally more formal. Here are some
examples:
Parts of inseparable phrasal verbs cannot be separated. If there is a direct object, it follows the
phrasal verb.
On the other hand, the object of separable phrasal verbs is movable. A pronoun object comes
between the first and second part. A short noun object can come between the two parts or can
follow the second part.
Some phrasal verbs can be either separable or inseparable according to their meanings in a
certain context.
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She passed the brochures out. (distributed)
ADJECTIVES
An adjective –
2. Commonly occurs between a determiner and a noun, or after be or other linking verbs or
immediately following the intensifier very
the _____ baby seems (very) _____
the hungry baby seems (very) hungry
1. restrictive/nonrestrictive adjectives
RESTRICTIVE adjectives are necessary for defining which noun is being referred to while NON-
RESTRICTIVE adjectives merely add information without being essential for identification.
Adjectives with positive polarity are unmarked forms because they are used more frequently
in a given language, learned earlier by children, and used in neutral contexts. Adjectives of
negative polarity are marked. They are less frequently used.
3. gradability
Adjectives that can be compared are also called gradable adjectives. Comparative forms
(adjectives marked by -er, more, or less) show differences/contrasts between two things
or groups. Superlative forms (marked by –est, most, or least) show differences in three or
more things or groups.
The as . . . as construction is used to show that two things or groups are similar.
Ella is as tall as her mother.
When two or more adjectives are used in a structure, they usually occur in a particular order or
sequence as follows:
COORDINATION
Conjunction or coordination is the process of combining ideas. Two constituents of the same type can
be put together to produce another larger constituent of the same type. Traditional grammar calls this
process compounding.
Compound sentence: The boys sang and the girls danced last night.
Compound subject: The teacher and her students will join the parade.
Compound verb: The children play and eat during recess.
Compound object: We boiled corn and cassava.
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Conjoining like constituents as shown above is referred to as simple coordination. Here are other ways
of coordinating ideas:
1. Ellipsis: Omission or elision of the first verb phrase in the second and adding the word too or
either (for uninverted forms), and so or neither (for inverted forms).
Affirmative forms
My friends like to read storybooks and I, too. (uninverted)
A horse runs fast, and so does an ostrich. (inverted)
Negative forms
Donna can’t climb a tree, and his little brother can’t, either. (uninverted)
Ducks can’t fly high, and neither can chickens. (inverted)
Other than and, simple coordinating conjunctions include: for, nor, but, or, yet, and so. Note the
following examples:
milk or chocolate
small but/yet terrible
The table is big, so heavy to lift. (non-clausal)
He came late, so he missed the fun. (clausal)
They accepted the verdict, for they failed to counter the charges against them. (clausal)
Other forms of correlative conjunctions are either . . . or, not only . . . but also, and neither . . . nor.
These pairs are used together
Either Tony or Nico will top the test.
Anna is neither friendly nor generous.
Our teacher is not only competent but also very understanding.
A deeper and thorough study of each conjunction, however, reveals certain properties beyond the given
straightforward account. To illustrate, here are the other meaning and uses of and.
3. As inferential connective
A reader/listener can draw an inferential connection from sentences like Susan jumped and hurt
her ankle. The use of and invites the listener/reader to seek some other implicit relevant
connection between stated conjuncts.
SUBORDINATION
SUBORDINATION means putting less important ideas in less important grammatical structures like
dependent clauses. One means of subordination is sentence combining or reducing.
Sentence combining
Although late, Melissa topped the
test
dependent independent clause
clause
Subordinating Conjunctions
Subordinating conjunctions do the job of connecting dependent clauses to independent clauses. Shown
below are different types.
Relative clauses
Another form of subordination involves the embedding of one clause within another. For example:
The most common relative pronouns which mark relative clauses are: that, which, who, whom, and
whose. Their uses are presented earlier in the section on pronouns
NEGATION
The following forms mark negation in English (Celce-Mucia and Larsen-Freeman, 2001.):
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Affix-Negation No-Negation Not-Negation
a- (atypical) no (no plans) not, n’t
dis- (dishonest) nothing (I cannot/can’t) play the
in/im/ir/il- nobody piano.)
(inadequate/impossible/ no one never (not + ever)
irrelevant/illegal) nowhere (My aunt has never left
non- (non-formal) our town.)
un- (uncomfortable) neither (not + either)
-less (useless) nor (and + not)
-free (fat-free) Neither his brother nor
his sister helps support
him in his studies.
Negation at the lexical or word level can simply use the negative affix. For example:
untidy untidily
impossible impossible
inadequate inadequately
illegally illegally
dishonest dishonestly
atypical atypically
Determining which affix to use is not always predictable. However, the choice of im-, in-, il- or ir- is
phonologically conditioned by the consonant which follows it, i.e., im- is used if the following consonant
is bilabial (b, p, m), il- goes with a stem beginning with l, and ir- with a stem beginning with r. The prefix
in- is the most common.
Nothing, nobody, and no one are indefinite pronouns while nowhere is an adverb.
Other negative items include never (negative adverb of frequency), nor (negative coordinating
conjunction, and neither . . . nor (negative correlative conjunction.
At the sentence level, not or its contraction n’t is the main negator. This applies to different sentence
types.
No and not are negative substitutes. No can be a negative substitute for a whole sentence while not for
a subordinate clause.
Placement of not
1. Not usually follows the be-verb, whether functions as a main verb (copula) or an auxiliary/helping
verb.
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I’m wondering why they are not chirping. (auxiliary verb)
2. Other than be, not follows the auxiliary verb if one is present or the first auxiliary (modal, phrasal
modal, or have) if there are two or more.
3. With other main verbs, a do-verb is introduced before negation can take place.
The child swims in the pool. The child does swim in the pool.
The child does not swim in the pool.
YES/NO QUESTIONS
are often defined as questions for which either “yes” or “no” is the expected answer.
YES/NO QUESTIONS
They are produced with a rising intonation.
Yes/no questions are formed by inverting the subject and the operator.
Yes/no questions may have a statement word order, i.e., the word order is uninverted. This sentence,
however, is likewise said with a rising intonation.
2
Lucy is your 3cousin3↑
2
She can speak 3fluently3↑
Yes/no questions usually take short answers using the operator. The operator is italicized below.
If the sentence contains more than one auxiliary verb, the short answer may also contain an auxiliary
verb in addition to the operator.
Semantic problems may arise for many ESL learners who react to a negative yes/no question in a literal
manner in their language. This means that they agree or disagree with the form of the yes/no question,
thus causing miscommunication.
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{No (I feel sorry).
While neutral yes/no questions, as in the preceding cases, query on the whole state, activity or event,
this query can be more focused sometimes.
Does Álex plan a foreign trip with Melly? (or did someone else?)
Does Alex plán a foreign trip with Melly? (or did he only suggest?)
Does Alex plan a foreign tríp with Melly? (or is it something else?)
Does Alex plan a foreign trip with Mélly? (or is it with someone else?)
The focused sentence element gets the primary stress as shown above.
Some and any can both occur with different question types depending on the meaning.
However, some is used in questions that expect a positive response, e.g., an offer:
WH-QUESTIONS
are used to seek specific information so they are also referred to as information
WH-QUESTIONS
questions. Except for how, these words begin with wh- : who, whose, whom, what, which, where,
when, why, and how.
Liza bought a beautiful house for her parents before she went to Canada.
Forming Wh-Questions
If who, what, or which is the subject of the sentence, it is followed by the normal word order of a
statement.
Whom/who, what and which as objects form questions by putting the wh-words first, and do, does, or
did next.
A modal (e.g., can) cannot be replaced by do, does, or did. The do-verb replaces the main verb.
Certain fixed formulaic wh-questions serve social functions (Celce-Murcia and Larsen Freeman 2001).
Among them are:
ADVERBS
Adverbs modify or change the meaning of other words such as verbs, adjectives, another adverb, or
even a whole sentence.
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Perhaps, Nena’s family will give a party.(sentence modifier)
Kinds of adverbs
Where we put only makes a big change in the meaning of a clause. To illustrate:
1. Only he (no one else) invited Alex to join the team this year.
2. He only invited Alex to join the team this year this year. (not ordered)
3. He invited only Alex (no one but Alex) to join the team this year.
4. He invited Alex only to join the team this year. (to join, not to do anything else)
5. He invited Alex to join the team only this year. (Before an adverb of time, only means as recently as
or at no other time.)
Positions of Adverbials
While some adverbials are fixed in their positions in the sentence, others are movable. They can occur
sentence initially, medially, or finally.
Order of Adverbials
When two or more adverbials co-occur in final position in the same sentence, ordering should be
observed.
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PART II: ANALYZING TEST ITEMS
Directions: Read each item carefully, then choose the letter of the correct answer
1. The judges chose Mawmaw the best dog in the show. The italicized phrase functions as _____.
A. object complement
B. direct object
C. indirect object
D. appositive
3. It’s raining hard. We have put _____ our work for today.
A. across
B. away
C. out
D. off
The answer is D. To put across means “ _____,” e.g., while to put away
means “_____ ” as in _____ On the other hand, to put out means “_____,”
e.g.,
BEGIN HERE:
1. The sentence “The audience class clapped when the musical rendition was over,” illustrates one
of these patterns.
A. N InV
B. N LV Adj
C. N TrV N
D. N InV Adv
2. In the sentence, “The club meeting will be in an hour,” the underlined phrase functions as _____.
A. subject complement
B. predicate noun
C. prepositional phrase
D. adverbial
3. Which of the following sentences does not have a linking verb?
A. The tall building appears haunted.
B. The principal is busy observing classes.
C. The ugly bud becomes a beautiful flower after two days.
D. The class are working on their science project.
15. You can sleep on the beach or in the woods. The sentence has conjoined _____.
A. clauses
B. predicates
C. verb phrases
D. prepositional phrases
16. _____ you learn to swim, you cannot go on this trip. The appropriate subordinating conjunction to
complete the sentence is _____.
A. If
B. Unless
C. Because
D. Since
17. You look attractive in _____ the blue sweater _____ the yellow. To complete the sentence which
correlative conjunction is appropriate?
A. not only . . . but
B. neither . . . nor
C. either . . . or
D. whether . . . or
18. The amount which she paid for is a student loan. The underlined words is considered _____.
A. an independent clause
B. a dependent clause
C. a fragment
D. a subject complement
19. My brother don’t like meat and neither do I. The underlined words show _____.
A. uninverted affirmative elision
B. inverted affirmative elision
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C. uninverted negative elision
D. inverted negative elision
20. Which of the following is a prototypical imperative sentence?
A. Let’s gather wild berries.
B. Could you please sharpen my pencil?
C. Don’t wash your dirty linen in public.
D. Wait for your turn.
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PART III. ENHANCING TEST-TAKING SKILLS
1. In the sentence, “The water supplier delivers on Tuesdays and Fridays,” the verb is a _____ verb.
E. transitive
F. intransitive
G. linking
H. two-word
2. Which of these is an active sentence?
I. The dishes have been washed.
J. Much corn is raised in the Ilocos Region.
K. The boy scouts raised the flag.
L. The drums are played at 7:45 in the evening.
3. A commentary of a sports match, a ceremony or an event makes use of the _____.
A. simple present
B. present progressive
C. present perfect
D. past progressive
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I love to eat fruits.
A. Mark and I love to eat fruits.
B. Mark loves to eat fruits and I do, either.
C. Mark loves to eat fruits and so do I.
D. Mark loves to eat fruits and I do, too.
15. In the sentence, “The awardee that the committee chose comes from a poor
family,” the underlined word functions as _____.
A. a sentence marker
B. object of the verb
C. subject of the clause
D. a subordinating conjunction
16. Ella was a girl who could surf but who was afraid to swim. The conjuncts in the sentence are _____.
A. sentences
B. relative clauses
C. relative pronouns
D. independent clauses
17. Which of the following sentences should have the article a on the blank?
A. The artist I talked in the art fair is _____ Michelangelo.
B. _____ Philippines has a lot of wonderful tourist destinations.
C. Obama Wins by _____ Landslide
D. _____ sampaguita lei is usually given to a guest of honor.
18. In the sentence, “The red roses given as a birthday gift by my best friend realy smell sweet,” which
adjective is predicative?
A. red
B. birthday
C. best
D. sweet
19. In the noun phrase, a sound advice from my grandmother who came last weekend, the head is
_____.
A. sound
B. advice
C. grandmother
D. weekend
20. Which of the following is a gradable adjective?
A. unique
B. round
C. perfect
D. healthy
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Pre-Board Items
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