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essential semantic implication clarifying the difference between the two types, of
polypredication in question.
As a matter of fact, a subordinate clause, however
important the information rendered by it might
be for the whole communication,
presents it as naturally supplementing the information of the principal clause, i.e.
as something completely premeditated and prepared
even before its explicit
expression in the utterance (5), (6), (7).
The Types of Complex Sentences
The subordinate clauses are classified according to the two criteria: meaning
and combinability. The clauses of a complex sentence form the unity,
a simple
sentence in which some part is replaced by a clause.
The subject clauses are used in the function of a primary part of the sen-
tence. The peculiarity of the subject clause is its inseparability
from the principal
clause. It is synsemantic; it can't be cut off from the rest of the sentence.
What he says is true.
The predicative clause fulfills the function of the notional predicate (the
function of the predicative).
e.g. The thing is what we should do the next.
The Adverbial clauses serve to express a variety of adverbial relations:
action quality. Mike acted as though nothing had happened.
=manner
.
Everybody should love her as he did.
Some more complex sentences:
What the newspapers say may be false (subject clause).
I don't remember what his name is. (object)
He thought that it might well be. (object)
The lot that is on the corner needs moving. (attributive)
He is a man whom I have always admired. (attributive)
When Bill decided to leave, everyone expressed regret. (adverbial clause of
time)
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