Б. С. Хаймович, Б. И. Роговская теоретическая грамматика английского языка


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MORPHOLOGY (1-377)

THE VERB

§ 187. Analysing the verb in Modern Russian, V. V. Vinogradov characterizes it as "the most complex and capacious part of speech". Likewise, A. I. Smirnitsky stresses the intricate nature of the English verb, the system of which includes, as if in miniature, some other parts of speech in the shape of the so-called non-finite verbs or verbids 1 (the infinitive, the gerund and the participle).


As a matter of fact, the verb is a system of systems. The main division inside the verb is that between the finite verbs (finites) and the verbids. The finites can further be subdi­vided into three systems called moods3. The infinitive, the gerund and the participle are also three systems within the verbids. Graphically this can be represented thus:

Finites

Indicative

Subjunctive

Imperative

Verbids

Infinitive

Gerund

Participle

Still, taken as a whole, the verb possesses all the features distinguishing a part of speech. So, naturally, we shall begin with those properties that characterize the verb as a whole. Only after that shall we dwell on the finites and the verbids separately.


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1 The term was suggested by O. Jespersen to avoid adding another connotation to the word verbal besides a) "concerned with words", b) "oral", c) "of the nature of a verb", d) "literal", etc. M. Bryant calls it one of Jespersen's best contributions to terminology (op. cit., p. 87).
3 See 'The Category of Mood'.

§ 188. As a part of speech the verb is characterized by the following properties:


1) Its lexico-grammatical meaning of 'action, process'.
2) Certain typical stem-building elements, such as the suffixes -ize, -en, -ify, the prefixes re-, under-, over-, out-, super-, sub-, mis-, un-, the lexico-gramjnatical word-mor­phemes 4 up, in, off, down, out, etc.
3) Its grammatical categories; out of the eight catego­ries of the verb system three are found not only in the finites, but in the verbids as well. Two of them — voice (asks is asked, to ask to be asked, asking being asked) and order (asks has asked, to ask to have asked, asking havihg asked) — are found in all the verbids, and the third — aspect (asks is asking, to ask to be asking) — in the infinitive.
4) Its characteristic combinability; a verb can be associ­ated with nouns (noun-equivalents) denoting the doer (agent) and the recipient of the action expressed by the verb; it is regularly modified by adverbs.
E. g. They continued their own occupations: a woman ironing, a girl sewing, the old lady looking at her feet, and the dog watching the cat closely. (Green).
Some peculiarities of the combinability of various classes of verbs will be discussed later on.
5) Its syntactical function of the predicate (incident to the finites only). The verbids have other functions (see §§ 303, 309), but they are secondary predicates in secondary predi­cations (see § 310).
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4 See § 14.

§ 189. As we know (§ 19), it is the stem that unites words into lexemes. Therefore, though stem-structure is not a re­liable criterion for distinguishing parts of speech, it can show whether certain words belong to the same lexeme or not. Now finites and the corresponding verbids have identical stem-structure, which characterizes them as words of the same lexemes, in spite of certain differences in combinability, function, etc. Cf. gives giving, gives up giving up, nationalizes nationalizing, whitewashes whitewashing, etc.


In accordance with their stem-structure verbs, like other parts of speech, fall under the following groups.
a) Simple verbs (write, know, love).
b) Derived verbs (organize, rewrite, purify, underestimate).
Note. Among the stem-building affixes of the verbs prefixes are of greater importance than suffixes. There is but one productive stem-build­ing verbal suffix (-ize), while productive prefixes are more numerous (re-, un-, over-, under-, mis-, de-, etc.).

Sound-interchange is unproductive (food feed, blood bleed), so is the change of stress, as in export — (to) export, transport (to) transport.


The most productive way of forming verb lexemes is con­version: (a) book (to) book, (a) man (to) man, better (to) better.
c) Compound verbs consisting of two stems, as in (to) broadcast, (to) whitewash, (to) blindfold.
N о t e. Composition is of low productivity in the class of verbs.

d) Composite verbs — made up of a verb with a lexico-grammatical word-morpheme attached to it, as in give up, give in, take off, put on. This way of forming verbs is pro­ductive.


§ 190. The lexico-grammatical meaning of the verb is, as usual, an abstraction from the individual lexical meanings of verbs and even from the more general lexical meanings of whole groups of verbs. Thus, the verbs to stand, to sleep, to suffer, etc. denote states rather than actions, but these states are presented as processes developing in time, and come therefore within the range of the lexico-grammatical meaning of the verb.


§ 191. The combinability of the verb is closely linked with its lexico-grammatical meaning. Denoting an action, the verb is naturally associated with nouns and noun-equiv­alents indicating the doer or the subject of the action.



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