D. V. Demidov
The system of verbs’ subclasses
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2. The system of verbs’ subclasses.
The complexity of the verb is also manifested in the intricate system of its grammatically relevant subclasses. According to their semantic (nominative) value all the verbs fall into two big subclasses: the subclass of notional verbs and the subclass of functional and semi-functional verbs. Notional verbs have full nominative value and are independent in the expression of the process, e.g.: to work, to build, to lie, etc. Functional and semi- functional verbs make a group of verbs of partial nominative value. They are dependent on other words, but through their forms the predicative semantics of the sentence is expressed (they function as predicators). On the basis of subject-process relations the notional verbs are subdivided into actional and statal verbs. Actional verbs denote the actions performed by the subject as an active doer, e.g.: to go, to make, etc.; statal verbs denote various states of the subject or present it as the recipient of a reality, e.g.: to love, to be, to worry. Another subdivision of notional verbs is based on their aspective meaning, which exposes the inner character of the process denoted. According to the mode of realization, the process may be instantaneous (momentary), (e.g.: to drop, to click), durative (continual), repeated, starting, completed, uncompleted, (e.g.: to begin, to continue). All these minor subdivisions are generalized into two big groups: the so-called limitive verbs and unlimitive verbs. Limitive verbs present a process as potentially limited, beyond which the process denoted by the verb is stopped or ceases to exist, e.g.: to come, to sit down, etc. Unlimitive verbs present the process as potentially not limited by any border point, e.g.: to go, to sit, to carry, etc. The next subdivision of the notional verbs is based on their combinability features, or their valency. O n this basis, verbs are 69 divided into transitive and intransitive: transitive verbs denote an action directed toward a certain object; in a sentence they are obligatorily used with a direct object. Constructions with transitive verbs are easily transformed from active into passive, e.g.: He wrote a letter. – The letter was written by him. Functional and semi- functional verbs are also subdivided into a number of groups. Auxiliary functional verbs are used to build the analytical grammatical forms of notional verbs, e.g.: have done, was lost. Link verbs connect the nominative part of the predicate with the subject, e.g.: He was pale. Modal verbs are predicators denoting various subject attitudes to the action, for example, obligation, ability, permission, advisability, etc.: can, must, may, etc. The subdivision of verbs into notional and (semi-) functional is grammatically relevant since the verbs of the two subclasses perform different syntactic functions in the sentence: notional verbs function as predicates, semi- functional and functional verbs as parts of predicates (predicators). In conclusion, it should be stressed once again that many verbs in English in different contexts migrate easily from one group to another, and the boundaries between the subclasses are less rigid than in any other language. Download 0.73 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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