Hello
Here is the content of the second lesson at Ragusa.
Lesson 2 Ragusa 5th December 2008
From Verbs to Adverbs
Corresponding to About English by Catherine Riley Chapter 3
Chapter 3 Verbs (3.6 p. 91) and next time ….. Adverbs (3.7 p.99)
• A verb is often defined as a word which shows action or state of being.
• The verb is the heart of a sentence – every sentence must have a verb.
• Recognizing the verb is often the most important step in understanding the meaning of a sentence.
• There are different kinds of verbs, two groups of which, auxiliary verbs and modals are function words and are dealt with in 3.14
• All other verbs are known as lexical verbs or main verbs (p.91)
Examples in a table:
|
Word
|
Sentence
|
Part of Speech
|
|
can
|
I think I can do it.
|
verb
|
|
can
|
Don’t open that can of beans.
|
noun
|
|
only
|
This is my only pen.
|
adjective
|
|
only
|
He was only joking.
|
adverb
|
|
his
|
That book is his.
|
pronoun
|
|
his
|
That is his book.
|
adjective
|
|
English
|
Can you speak English?
|
noun
|
|
English
|
I am reading an English novel.
|
adjective
|
There are many ways of classifying verbs.
• Verbs of : activity, communication, mental, causative, occurence, existence or relationship, aspect (Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English in Riley Ref. P.91)
• Verbs can be grouped according to transitivity patterns
• According to form: one-word verbs, multi-word verbs, compound verbs,
• Regular and irregular verbs
• Reflexive, reciprocal and ergative verbs
• Whether followed by a bare or full infinitive (p.92)
Most common lexical verbs
45% in conversation !
• Activity verbs: get (2), go (3) make (7), come (8) take (9) give (11)
• Mental know (4), think (5), see (6), want (10), mean (12)
• Communicative: say(1)
• There are 4,500 occurences of the verb say in each million words of English (p.92)
Delexical Verbs
• 3 of the 6 most commonly occurring activity verbs in spoken English
• make, take, and give are often used as delexical verbs – a group of verbs whose own lexical meaning is very weak when used with certain nouns like
• make a mistake,
• take a photograph
Copular (link) Verbs
• Get and go are aften used as copular (link) verbs in many phrases.
• Example: In winter, even in Sicily it gets dark at about 5.30.
• My father is going deaf, the fans went mad when they saw the pop star
Transitivity
• Certain verbs ,must be accompanied by a direct object
• i.e. they are transitive
• The direct object must come directly after the verb
• N.B. Word order is much stricter in English than in Italian. Knowing about word classes should also include their position in a sentence. (p.93)
Examples
• In the sentence ‘The dog bit the teacher’, bit is the verb and the word which shows the action of the sentence.
• In the sentence : ‘The Ragusa language student is sitting on a chair’, even though the action doesn’t show much activity, sitting is the verb of the sentence.
• In the sentence ‘Jo is a smart girl’, there is no action but a state of being expressed by the verb is. The word be is different from other verbs in many ways but can still be thought of as a verb.
Unlike most of the other parts of speech, verbs change their form.
• Sometimes endings are added
learn – learned
• and sometimes the word itself becomes different
teach-taught
Tense/person/number/voice
The different forms of verbs show different meanings related to such things as
• tense (past, present, future),
• person (first person, second person, third person),
• number (singular, plural) and
• voice (active, passive)
One of the most important things about verbs is their relationship to time.
• Verbs tell if something ……has already happened, if it will happen later or if it is happening now
For things happening now, we use the present tense of a verb; for something that has already happened, we use the past tense; and for something that will happen later, we use the future tense.
• Verbs like those in the chart above that form the past tense by adding -d or -ed are called regular verbs.
• Some of the most common verbs are not regular and the different forms of the verb must be learned.
• There are a large but limited number of irregular verbs
Not only are there the simple tenses of the verbs.
• There are also progressive or continuous forms which show that the action takes place over a period of time, and perfect forms which show completion of the action.
• Simple present tense verbs have a special form for the third person singular. Singular means “one” and plural means “more than one.” Person is used here to show who or what does the action and can have the following forms:
1st person or the self (I, we)
2nd person or the person spoken to (you)
3rd person or a person not present (he, she, it, they)
The third person singular forms are represented by the pronouns he, she, it.
A verb must “agree” with its subject. Subject-verb agreement generally means that the third person singular verb form must be used with a third person subject in the simple present tense.
The word be – the most irregular and also most common verb in English – has different forms for each person and even for the simple past tense.
English is an S V O language
• Almost always in the affirmative a subject comes before a verb and an object may come after it.
• The subject is what does the action of the verb and the object is what receives the action.
• In the sentence Bob ate a humburger, Bob is the subject or the one who did the eating and the hamburger is the object or what got eaten.
• A verb which has an object is called a transitive verb and some examples are throw, buy, hit, love.
• A verb which has no object is called an intransitive verb and some examples are go, come, walk, listen.
• Verbs are often made up of more than one word.
• The future forms, for example, use the word will and the perfect forms use the word have. These words are called helping or auxiliary verbs.
• The word be can serve as an auxiliary and will and shall are also auxiliary forms.
• There is a type of auxiliary verb called a modal which changes the meaning of a verb in different ways.
• Words like can, should, would, may, might, and must are modals and are covered in other lessons.
• Later we will also look at Phrasal Verbs
|
Present Continuous
|
Present Perfect
|
|
is looking
|
has looked
|
|
is speaking
|
has spoken
|
|
is talking
|
has talked
|
|
Singular
|
Plural
|
|
1st Person (I)
|
see
hear
come |
1st Person (we)
|
see
hear
come |
|
2nd Person (you)
|
see
hear
come |
2nd Person (you)
|
see
hear
come |
|
3rd Person (he, she, it)
|
sees
hears
comes |
3rd Person (they)
|
see
hear
come |
Best wishes
Philip