Б. С. Хаймович, Б. И. Роговская теоретическая грамматика английского языка
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MORPHOLOGY (1-377)
You feel ill at ease when your old friend tells you that he can't place his short stories. (Maugham).
When used in speech most of the personal pronouns (we, you, they, he) may acquire a generalizing force, as in the examples We don't kill a pig every day (proverb). You cannot get blood from a stone (proverb). They say she is breathtakingly beautiful. (The Times). He who pays the piper calls the tune (proverb). Possessive Pronouns § 150. The possessive pronouns are usually treated as adjective pronouns, whereas they are in reality noun pronouns or pro-nouns, but they replace only possessive case nouns with which they are correlated. Cf. This is the teacher's (his, her) bicycle. This bicycle is the teacher's (his, hers). The combinability and functions of the possessive pronouns and the 'possessive case' nouns are almost identical, which justifies the view that the pronouns in question are possessive case opposites of the personal pronouns. The only argument we can put forward against that view and in favour of the opinion that the possessive pronouns are a separate group, is as follows. § 151. Modern English differs from Old English and from other Modern Germanic languages in having two sets of possessive pronouns — the conjoint possessive pronouns my, thy, his; her, its, our, your, their and the absolute possessive pronouns mine, thine, his, hers, ours, yours, theirs. : 'Possessive case' nouns, as we know (§ 97) can also be used absolutely (the idea was George's), but with them it is only a matter of. usage in speech, since it is not fixed in any language forms. It is quite different with the pronouns. The pairs my — mine, thy — thine, our — ours, your — yours, etc. can be regarded as opposemes of a grammatical category. It is difficult to find a name.for that category, but it resembles the category of case. As shown (§ 82), a case opposeme belongs to the morphological system of the language, but it reflects speech combinability and syntactical functions. The same can be said about an opposeme like my — mine. The difference between its members is in combinability and function. My has right-hand connections with nouns and functions as an attribute. Mine has other connections and other functions in the sentence. Now if we assume that both my and mine are 'possessive case' opposites of I, we have then to speak of a case opposeme within the possessive case, Therefore, it would, probably, be more in keeping with language facts (a) to treat my (mine), her (hers), our (ours), etc. not as the possessive case of personal pronouns but as a subclass of pronouns; (b) to regard my - mine, her — hersr etc. as a kind of case opposemes. It is obvious that further research is vitally necessary. § 152. The possessive pronouns of the first and second persons (as well as the corresponding personal pronouns) do not in fact replace any nouns, but their usage does not dif-fer from that of the third person pronouns. The pronoun its has a much wider application than the possessive case of nouns denoting inanimate things. Cf. The atmosphere of the room, rarely the room's atmosphere, but its atmosphere. Its has no 'absolute' opposite. The 'absolute' and 'conjoint' his may be regarded as homonyms. Cf. Her (his) friend, a friend of hers (his). § 153. One of the peculiarities of Modern English is the extensive use of conjoint possessive pronouns. When used in cases like He entered with his eyes shining and his hair in disorder, they add very little information. In fact their function is to specify nouns in the way the definite article does. They might be treated as pro-art icles, but (a) they are correlated only with the definite article, (b) the meaning of the definite article is much more general than that of his or her. Reflexive Pronouns § 154. They are compound noun pronouns whose second element -self expresses the anaphorical relation of the first element, i. e. it shows that the first element refers to the person mentioned previously in the sentence. Thus, I ... myself, thou ... thyself, he (or John) ... himself, she (or Mary) ... herself, it (or bird) ... itself „we ... ourselves, you ... yourself (yourselves), they (or the children) ... themselves, one ... oneself. § 155. Like the personal and the possessive pronouns, the reflexive pronouns distinguish the lexico-grammatical meanings of person, number and gender. Some linguists are of the opinion that in myself—ourselves, yourself — yourselves number is expressed grammatically. But this is an illusion caused by the correlation self — selves. As ourselves is not myself + myself, but myself + yourself or myself + yourselves, or myself + himself, or myself + herself, or myself + themselves, we are to regard myself and ourselves as different lexical units, just as I and we, my and our. As to the so-called reflexive voice, see § 211. § 156. The anaphorical use of the reflexive pronouns accounts for the fact that they do not occur in the function of subjects, their usual function being that of prepositionless or prepositional objects. Download 1.22 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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