Gethin - Grammar in Context Original Book Proofread)
Gethin - Grammar in Context Original Book Proofread)
3
Foreword to the revised edition
This edition of the book is in its scope and method the same as the first; the
material and its arrangement remain basically unchanged. But there were in
the first edition some omissions in the treatment of adverbs and links
(conjunctions) which have been made good. Also a large part of the section
on reported speech has been rewritten with additional examples and exercises
in order to make the approach to this aspect of English grammar both more
extensive and more flexible. Elsewhere in the book I have occasionally
altered the wording of the explanations where I have thought these could be
made clearer, but on the whole have not found it necessary to amend the
exercises except to accommodate the extra adverbs and links.
What is entirely new to this edition is the introduction of style marking,
that is to say, of a definite indication in the text that certain words or
constructions are associated with a formal style of English. Whereas in the
first edition this association was mentioned only in the explanations, in the
present edition it is specifically pointed out wherever it occurs in examples
and exercises (see the relevant paragraph in the Introduction for the learner).
The intention is that in this way users of the book will be made more aware of
the relationship between grammatical usage and style.
It is of course gratifying that the book should have found enough favour
amongst learners and teachers of English to warrant a revised edition, and this
approval, silent though it may be, has been a very real encouragement in its
preparation. I would welcome any comments, however critical, that the book's
users might like to make through the publishers.
I should also like to record here my gratitude to Annette Capel, prime
mover and promoter of this revised edition, and to Caroline Egerton, who
returned to the book in the editorial role which she undertook for the first
edition and which she has again fulfilled so well.
HG
4
Introduction
Examples
The way a language works is best shown by example, and so the introduction to
any typical section of the book is followed first by examples of the grammar dealt
with in that section. Since language is normally organised for intelligent
communication, and is not a collection of unconnected utterances, the examples
in each section are as far as possible connected to form a discourse or 'story' to
show grammar in use and not just as 'naked' grammar lying about doing nothing.
From these examples you should be able to get quite a good idea of how the
language works.
5
Explanation
In order thoroughly to understand the examples, however, you will need some
help; and to make understanding and learning easier you will probably feel the
need for rules. To answer these needs as far as possible, an explanation follows
the examples. It is linked for reference purposes to the examples by numbers and
letters, so that you do not have to go through the whole explanation to clarify a
certain example. This should be of particular advantage in review sections such
as those on verb tenses (1B) and relatives (8A), where you may find that your
existing knowledge makes some of the explanation unnecessary. In any
explanation of grammar, descriptive terminology is unavoidable, and this is not
introduced here for its own sake. Sometimes you will recognise the terms used
through your own language, but in any case their meaning is illustrated in the
examples and explained if necessary.
Exercises
Having, through the examples and the explanation, understood the grammar
involved, you now have to practise and test your knowledge. The exercises, like
the examples, are as far as possible organised as discourse so that you can use the
grammar you are learning in a meaningful context. It is important, therefore, to
read out or to rewrite the whole text and not just the portion that needs changing.
To help you prepare for some of the exercises, there are study lists towards the
end of the book, placed there to make it easier for you not to refer to them while
actually doing the exercises. If you find the exercises too difficult, you should
return to examples, explanation or lists, and also if necessary to your dictionary,
for better preparation.
6
language occurs in the examples and exercises it is labelled, or style-marked,
in the way described in the introductory note to 3 (p.50).
Order of contents
The numbered sections of the book are in an order that can be followed to
advantage, but are sufficiently independent of each other to be taken in the
order that best answers your needs. However, the subsections A, B etc. build
upon each other, and should be done in the order given.
Indexes
There are grammatical and word indexes that refer you by section number and
letter to the relevant explanations, which, as mentioned above, are themselves
linked with the examples.
Key to exercises
So that you can correct your answers to the exercises yourself, there is a key
to them at the end of the book.
7
For the teacher
It is through what I have already said to the learner that I can best introduce
the book to a teacher. In continuation I should like to add the following.
Rationale
This book has come into being, over many years of teaching and organising
courses, in response to the need of post-intermediate students to feel bedrock
beneath them. Learners at this level may be superficially fluent and able to
cope socially in the language, but often flounder in a slough of words when
more exact communication, written or spoken, is required of them. Those
who meet the challenge and make further progress are usually those who not
only need but actively demand a fuller understanding of grammar. At the
stage we are talking about, this demand can best be met through the medium
of English itself.
Although there are several EFL books dealing with grammar at this level,
they have not all got exercises under the same cover. Also I have thought it to
be very well worthwhile to try and put the grammar into more homogeneous
contexts than are found in other books. The object thereby is not that learners
should lose sight of the grammar as such (which happens in some books) but
that they should see it used in examples in a contextual situation, and
therefore in a more meaningful way, than they would in unconnected
sentences. Where possible I have extended this treatment to the exercises.
Thus the book, and thus its title.
Use
As already pointed out to the learner, the order followed by the main sections
of this book is a recommended one only. The extensive cross-referencing that
is provided should allow you to integrate the book into the rest of your
teaching programme in any order required. Whichever section is selected for
teaching, it is of course most important that you should thoroughly acquaint
yourself beforehand with its examples, explanation and exercises.
Most of the grammatical categories that I have used will be familiar to you.
I have departed from the traditional ones only where, after experiment and
discussion, it has been apparent that there are better ways (at least at this level
of teaching) of presenting the grammar of the language. Instances are the
division of verb use into the categories of 'fact' and 'non-fact' and the
incorporation into the passive of an auxiliary form. The examples and
explanation of each section should soon put you in the picture regarding the
categories used.
Depending on the time available and the depth of study required, the
exercises may be done in class, orally or in writing, or as homework for later
checking and comment.
8
Weighting
The book does not set out to be a comprehensive grammar of English. Some
grammatical features, such as independent prepositions, have been considered
familiar enough to the post-intermediate learner to be used in examples and
exercises without grammatical comment. Others, such as verb tenses and relative
pronouns, are not dealt with from scratch but are extensively reviewed and
presented as a working unit.
The emphasis throughout is on the essential unit of discourse, which is the
contextualised sentence; the relation between grammar and meaning is never
forgotten. The aim is that serious learners should acquire, without the need for
systematic structural analysis, a knowledge of the English sentence so that they
can get its grammar and its meaning right not only in exercises but in their own
connected speech and writing.
The grammar dealt with is that of British English. Some might argue that, since
this is not always the same as North American (including Canadian) grammar, I
should draw attention to the differences. The fact that I have not done so is
because I do not consider them to be important enough to justify complicating the
text on their account. Most of these differences concern prepositions (such as the
use of than instead of from after different) or verb use (for example do you have
in the interrogative instead of have you with or without got). They are being
continually moderated by the powerful influence upon the English language of
the US media, so that Americanisms soon become known to the advanced learner
and retain little, if any, of their mystery. It is as well, however, to be consistent in
one's grammatical usage, and it is to this end that the book's grammar has
remained on this side of the Atlantic.
9
1 Verb tenses
Note: Under 17A you will find a study list of the forty verbs used in the
following two Exercises. Although they are all quite common verbs their past
tenses often cause difficulty, and you are advised to familiarise yourself with
them first, so that you can do the Exercises with little hesitation and with
appreciation of their meaning.
Exercises 1A p.10
Combine the question and the answer to make a complete statement as shown in
the Examples above.
1
1 How far did the car skid ?
Nearly thirty metres.
2 Why did the driver tread on the accelerator?
Because he thought it was the brake.
3 Did the accelerator stick wide open?
Yes, it did.
4 What did the car hit?
A lamp-post.
5 What did they bind the driver's wound with?
A piece of shirt.
6 How long did the passenger's nose bleed for?
Quite a long time.
7 Where did the passenger lie down?
On the pavement.
8 Where did the driver wake up?
In hospital.
10
VERB TENSES 1A
2
1 Why did Sheila's lip swell up?
Because a wasp stung her.
2 How did Ken split his trousers?
Climbing over a fence.
3 Did Toby bet that Ken could not sew them up himself?
Yes, he did.
4 Did Ken sew them up himself?
Yes, he did.
5 How did Helen slit the envelope open?
With her enormously long fingernail.
6 How did Marilyn speed up her typing?
By going to evening classes.
7 How much did Zena bid for the Chinese vase?
A couple of hundred.
8 When did she fall?
Going down the stairs.
9 How did she feel about breaking the vase?
Terrible.
11
*
1B VERB TENSES
12
VERB TENSES 1B
You should already be familiar with English tenses and to a large extent with
their use, and so what follows immediately below is in the nature of revision so
that you can refresh and exercise your knowledge. The Examples set out tenses
for fact, together with their English names, divided into the SIMPLE and the
PROGRESSIVE form (called CONTINUOUS in some books). The Explanation draws
attention to the more important points regarding their use. The three Exercises
deal first with the present and past tenses, then with tenses relating to future time,
and finally with all tenses.
Examples 1B p.13
TENSES (SIMPLE)
TENSES (PROGRESSIVE) S
Explanation 1B p.13
a refers (1,3) to a point of time in the past or 'then' (five years ago,
PAST SIMPLE
1970) which answers the question 'When?' The time-point may not
13
1B VERB TENSES
always be mentioned with the verb but can be supplied, with varying
degrees of accuracy:
'Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb.' 'When?' 'In 1878/
Some time in the last century.'
The past simple may also refer to a period of time completed in the past,
answering the question 'How long ...?'
The Second World War lasted nearly six years. See
also c below.
b PAST PERFECT SIMPLE refers to time before or until 'then' (five years ago). It
may answer the question 'How long ...?' (2) or 'When?' (3).
c PRESENT PERFECT SIMPLE refers to time before or (4) until 'now', which is the
moment of writing or speaking. However, it can not refer to a time-point
or 'then', and so cannot answer the question 'When?' ( not 'I've joined the
firm in 1970'). But it may be used with several words (adverbs) in
reference to time before 'now':
He has just told me that he has recently been made Managing
Director and has already been busier than he has ever been before.
Just now and only recently can answer the question 'When?' with the past
tense:
He told me just now that he only recently became Managing
Director.
d PRESENT SIMPLE refers principally (5) to what exists or occurs habitually ( I
work) in our present lives or nowadays. In this use it refers to repeated, not
single, events:
When do you go to London? – (I go) On Fridays/Every Friday.
e PRESENT SIMPLE (FUTURE USE) refers (6) to a future that is planned, usually
through regulations, programmes, timetables etc. (compare m below).
In this use it may refer to single events:
When (according to your travel schedule) do you go to London? – (I
go) On Friday/Next Friday.
f FUTURE SIMPLE is used for the future when there is no definite plan or
intention (but see p below), or if there is a condition attached ( 1C). It often
occurs with think (7), expect, wonder, perhaps, probably etc. But it is used for
a planned future when the verb has no progressive form (see s below): I'll
have my new car next month ( not 'I'm having ...').
g FUTURE PERFECT SIMPLE refers to time before or (8) until 'then' in the future (in
five years). Like the past perfect, but unlike the present perfect, it may
sometimes refer to a time-point:
I'll be tired when I arrive, because I'll have had an exam the day
before.
h PAST PROGRESSIVE refers to what was in progress in the past. When this was
over a period of time, either the progressive or the simple form may
14
VERB TENSES 1B
15
1B VERB TENSES
Exercise 1 1B p.16
For each verb in brackets, choose one of the following tenses: the PRESENT,
PRESENT PERFECT, PAST Or PAST PERFECT, in either the
SIMPLE or PROGRESSIVE
16
VERB TENSES 1B
form. If, as well as the verb, there is another word (an adverb) inside the brackets,
its position in relation to the correct tense is shown either in the Examples or in
the Explanation.
Brenda Pearl (1 join) our firm ten years ago. She (2 work) for the previous five
years with an advertising company and (3 acquire) much useful experience. For
the first eight years with us she (4 work) in the Sales Department, and (5 work)
there when I (6 become) Managing Director. Since then she (7 work) as my
personal assistant, and (8 prove) herself to be outstandingly capable on many
occasions. She (9 work) on the top floor, in an office next to mine, but at the
moment (10 work) in London on a special assignment.
When the North and South finally (11 lay) down their arms in 1865 at the end of
the American Civil War they (12 fight) for over four years and the South, which
(13 win) several battles but (14 lose) the war, (15 be) economically exhausted. It
(16 be) a tragedy that Abraham Lincoln, who (17 lead) the North to victory and
(18 be) now ready to be generous to the South, (19 not |survive) to make the
peace. Five days after General Lee (20 surrender) at Appomattox, Lincoln (21
be) assassinated.
Denis (22 always |ring) me up when I am in the shower or washing my hair. The
last time the phone (23 ring) with me in the shower I (24 not (answer) it. I (23
learn) later that someone (26 ring) me up to offer me a job which they then (27
offer) to someone else. I (28 just |tell) Denis that he (29 be) to blame for the fact
that I (30 miss) a golden opportunity.
'What (31 do |you) with yourself lately? I (32 not |see) you for over a month.'
'I (33 be) in Stockholm since I last (34 see) you.'
'Really? How long (35 be |you) there and what (36 do |you)?'
'Nearly three weeks. I (37 do) some research at the Royal Library. I think I
(38 already |tell) you that I (39 work) on a book about Scandinavia.'
'Yes. How (40 go |it)?'
'Not so bad. I (41 hope) to have it in the hands of the publisher by the end of
the year.'
Peter (42 live) in Nodnol, the capital of Mercia. At least, that's where he (43 live)
when he last (44 write). In his letter he (45 invite) me to visit him, but as I (46
have) no answer to my last two letters I (47 wonder) whether I should go or not. I
(48 also |have) no reply from the consulate about the Mercian visa I (49 apply)
for two weeks ago. Although I (50 be) born in Mercia, I no longer (51 have) a
Mercian passport.
(On the telephone): Yes, I'm at Georgina's house this evening. What (52 do |I)
here? I (53 babysit). She and her husband (54 go) to a party. Four-four children.
They (55 be) usually rather wild. I (56 babysit) here once when they all (57 start)
screaming. But they (58 be) very good at the moment. I can see the youngest now
in the room next door: she (59 eat) a huge box of
17
1B VERB TENSES
chocolates that Georgina (60 give) me before she (61 leave). The others (62 find)
a tin of paint and happily (63 paint) the walls of the kitchen. They (64 assure) me
that they (65 do) this before and that their mother and father (66 have) no
objection then. I only (67 hope) they (68 tell) me the truth. One of them (69 get)
himself in a bit of a mess. 1(70 try) to clean him up with paint remover, but so far
without much success.
Exercise 2 1B p.18
This Exercise covers the tenses and forms used for future time, namely the SIMPLE
or PROGRESSIVE FUTURE, FUTURE PERFECT and PRESENT tenses, and the going to form.
For each verb in brackets use one of these.
I hope Brenda (1 still |work) for me when I retire in six years' time. She (2 retire)
herself a few years afterwards, because she (3 then |be) sixty. She (4 work) for
the firm for twenty years by then and (5 qualify) for the firm's full pension. She
says that when she retires she (6 work) as a business consultant. Perhaps she (7
earn) a lot more money doing that than she does now. At the moment she is in
London on a special assignment, but she (8 come) back tomorrow, so if you look
in then I (9 introduce) you to her. (10 tell 11) her you may come?
I(11 see) Willie tomorrow at our weekly Japanese class, sol (12 tell) him what
you have just told me. He (13 be) very pleased to know that you have passed
your music exam. What (14 do |you) next? (15 prepare |you) for the higher
grade?
According to this timetable for my business trip to Brazil for the firm, I (16 be)
due in Rio on the fourteenth and (17 leave) for Sao Paulo on the seventeenth.
That (18 not |give) me enough time to visit the three factories that are listed: they
(19 need) at least a day each. Incidentally, when (20 meet |I) our representative
in Sao Paulo? There's no mention of that here. And 1 see that 1 (21 be) due back
in Britain on the twenty-second, which (22 mean) only forty-eight hours in
Brasilia, which in my opinion (23 not |be) enough. (24 be |you) free any time
this afternoon? Three-thirty? Good. So (25 be |I). Could I discuss my Brazilian
programme with you then?
'I hear that Marilyn (26 go) to the States shortly. What (27 do |she) there?'
'She (28 promote) her firm's products.'
'How (29 do |she) that?'
'She (30 demonstrate) them to selected retail outlets. I am sure she (31 do)
extremely well.'
Sir James and Lady Blenkinsop (32 be) married for thirty years next March.
They (33 celebrate) their wedding anniversary with a dinner party at Blenkinsop
Hall on the seventeenth. I don't think it (34 be) a particularly stylish affair, but I
am sure a lot of good food (35 be) served. Sheila, Ken and Willie have been
invited and (36 go). Marilyn was invited too, but can't go
18
VERB TENSES 1B
because she (37 leave) for the States by then. Helen and Denis say they
(38 go) - if they're invited! I haven't been invited yet, but I can't go anyway,
as I (39 work) on a job in Glasgow at the time. (40 go |you)?
'Do you think there (41 be) an election next month?'
'Yes, there (42 be) one; they've just announced it on the radio. They haven't
given a date, but I expect it (43 be) on the last Thursday.'
'Who do you think (44 win)?'
'I don't know who (45 win). But the Government (46 lose).'
'This time tomorrow I (47 take) my driving test. Wish me luck!' 'I (48 do)
better than that; I (49 give) you some last-minute instruction.' 'Thank you, but
T (50 not |go)out this evening. I (51 stay) in and (52 go) to bed early. That (53
be) the best way to prepare for the test.'
'I've just heard the weather forecast. It (54 snow). And that reminds me that
Christmas soon (55 be) here. Have you any plans for a holiday?'
'I (56 fly) to Mercia to stay with a friend, but as I probably (57 not |get) a visa
in time I've decided to cancel the trip. So it looks as if I (58 spend) Christmas
at home as usual. (59 do |you) the same?'
'No, I (60 go) to Sweden.'
'Really? What (61 do |you) there?'
'I (62 do) some research for my book on Scandinavia. Then, if I have time, I
(63 visit) friends in Dalarna, about three hundred kilometres from
Stockholm.'
'So when (64 be |you) back in England?'
'I (65 fly) back on the eighth of January.'
'Have you heard the latest? I expect it (66 surprise) you. Helen and Denis (67
get) married!'
'I (68 believe) that when it happens. I'm sure their engagement or whatever
you like to call it (69 not | last) long; they (70 start) quarrelling again soon'
Exercise 3 1B p.19
This Exercise covers all the tenses dealt with in this section. Choose a
suitable tense for each verb in brackets.
Ken (1 drive) along yesterday when a stone (2 go) clean through the
windscreen. As he (3 pass) another car at the time it (4 be) lucky he (5 not |
have) a nasty accident. He says that lorries from the quarry still (6 use) that
road and that stones often (7 fall) off them. I (8 not |drive) that way into town
in future if I can possibly avoid it.
Next month I (9 be) married for ten years. We (10 live) in this house for ten
years too. We (11 celebrate) the two anniversaries with a party to which we
(12 invite) some friends and neighbours. Most of our neighbours (13 be) also
our friends, and (14 already |say) they (15 come). The family next door,
19
1C VERB TENSES
however, (16 not |be) very friendly at the moment and (17 decline) the invitation,
presumably because of a dispute about the fence between their garden and ours.
We (18 have) the fence repaired last week, since it (19 be) broken for several
months, with the result that dogs (20 get) in on several occasions and (21 do)
quite a lot of damage. It is our neighbours who (22 be) responsible for the
maintenance of this particular fence, and so we naturally (23 send) them the bill,
which they (24 not |pay) yet.
'It (25 not |be) so very long ago that man first (26 land) on the moon. What an
astonishing achievement that (27 be)! I remember how one evening at nine
o'clock Armstrong and Aldrin (28 walk) about and (29 chat) 400,000 kilometers
away, and you and I (30 watch) and (31 listen) to them. Nothing like it (32
happen) before and I sometimes (33 think) that nothing like it (34 happen) again.'
'Why (35 say |you) that nothing like it (36 happen) before? Astronauts from other
planets (37 visit) our solar system ever since it (38 begin). At this very moment
spaceships (39 hover) overhead and (40 watch) what you and I (41 do). As I (42
walk) home the other evening I (43 see) something in the sky which definitely
(44 not |come) from anywhere on this planet. And if you (45 think) I (46 drink)
you are wrong. That (47 not |be) the only time I (48 see) strange objects in the
sky. I (49 see) quite a few over the years and (50 report) them all to the UFO
club. One day I (51 write) a book about them. Tomorrow, though, I (52 go) to
Manchester to buy the latest UFO literature.'
'I (53 think) about our plans for next week. What (54 do |you) next Thursday
evening? (55 be |you) on duty at the hospital?'
'I (56 be) on duty, but I (57 change) with a friend who (58 want) Friday off.
What (59 have |you)in mind?'
'How about going to see Macbeth 1 It (60 be) on for the whole of next week.
(61 see |you) the play?'
'I (62 see) a film of it once. But I (63 not |see) the play itself. Yes, that's a
good idea: we (64 go) and see Macbeth,'
'I (65 book) the seats. (66 ask |I) Willie to come too?'
'He (67 work), I bet. He (68 always |work). He (69 work) too much. He
(70 have) a nervous breakdown if he's not careful.'
20
VERB TENSES 1C
directly after CONDITIONAL links or TIME links;* instead they are used in the present
or present perfect tenses:
I'll tell her more on Monday if she comes. (Compare: Perhaps she'll
come on Monday; I'll tell her more then.)
When I've read the book I'll lend it to him. (Compare: I'll lend him the
book next week; I'll have read it by then.
The principal conditional and time links are as follows:
CONDITIONAL LINKS if
providing, provided (that), as/so long as
even if
unless
supposing
whether ... or
however, no matter how (late etc.)
whoever, wherever, whenever etc.
no matter who/where/when etc.
TIME LINKS after while
before until, till
when as soon as, immediately
as by the time
There are one or two other instances of the use of present for future tenses which,
although not so important as the above, should be mentioned. They are included
in the Examples and Explanation below. (See also 4Ad.)
Examples 1C p.21
1 Providing you're back by eight o'clock you can go to the airport to
welcome the group. a
2 You must come back then even if they haven't arrived. b, j
3 They'll drive to the concert hall in an open car unless it's raining. c
4 Whether the plane's late or not, they'll get a terrific welcome, d
5 I'm not going to miss the chance of seeing them however late they are. e
6 There'll be a lot of fans at the airport whenever the group arrives. f
7 What will the police do, supposing the crowd gets out of hand ? g
8 Some of the fans will be pretty impatient by the time the plane lands. h
9 Here they are! Don't worry – I'll give you your camera back when/after/as
soon as/immediately I've taken a photo! j
10 The police will stop people who try to get too close to them. k
11 I don't care what the police do: I'm going to get their autographs. 1
12 It'll be the first time I've spoken to a pop star. m
13 (Police officer): Now if you girls and boys will all stop pushing and
shoving, we'll be a lot more comfortable, won't we? (Exception!) n
* Called LINKS because they link or join two parts of a sentence together. As you will see from the
Examples, either part may come first.
21
1C VERB TENSES
Explanation 1C p.22
a Providing (1), provided (that), as/so long as are approximately equivalent.
They are all emphatic forms of if, emphasising a condition.
b Even if (2) introduces an extreme condition. Emphasis is on even, not if.
c Unless (3) can generally be replaced by if... not (if it's not raining) or
providing etc. ... not, but sometimes more suitably by except when:
I won't ever use the car for work unless/except when it's raining.
d Whether ... or (4) used conditionally must be distinguished from the
interrogative link used in indirect questions, after which the future tense may
be used:
I wonder whether they'll come (or not).
Unlike conditional whether, the interrogative link can usually be replaced by
if (I wonder if.. .).* Here again it is important to distinguish between this
interrogative use of if and its conditional use.
e However (late etc.) (5) must be distinguished from the adverb however (2Bm,
5e). One difference is that it can be replaced by no matter how (late etc.).
Another is that both these conditional links include the use of adverbs or
adjectives such as late except when they mean whatever way/whichever way:
The disco will let you in however/no matter how (= whatever way)
you're dressed.
f Similarly, whenever (6) and other -ever forms can often be replaced by no
matter when etc. But whenever can also mean (at) any time (that):
Come whenever/(at) any time (that) you want.
Here, although it is still followed by a present and not a future tense, it cannot
be replaced by no matter when. The other -ever forms may be used in a
similar way:
The police will stop whoever/anyone who tries to get too close.
The two different uses can occur in the same sentence:
Come any time (= whenever) you want, whenever (= no matter
when) it is.
The police will stop anyone who (= whoever) tries to get too close,
whoever (= no matter who) it is.
g Supposing (7) may, like other conditional links, be used at the beginning of a
sentence. But then it often does not act as a link, and so one sentence is turned
into two. In this position supposing can alternate with suppose:
Supposing/Suppose the crowd gets out of hand. What will the police
do?
*
It cannot be replaced by if when it is directly followed by an infinitive: 'I don't know whether to go or not
'
22
VERB TENSES 1C
h By the time (8) is used when we cannot give a definite time: by the time the
plane lands = some time not later than when it lands. Note that by eight o'clock
(l) = not later than eight o'clock.
j When, after etc. (9) are followed by the present perfect to indicate
completion of an action. Note also a similar use after even if (2).
k A DEFINING RELATIVE (8Ab) like who (10) is used with a present tense to refer to
future time when the relative itself follows a future tense (will stop). Compare:
There's no one here who'll stop you.
1 Don't care (11) is always used with a present instead of a future tense. With
hope we can use either:
I hope the police won't/don't stop you.
m After it will/won't be the first/second etc. time (12) we always use the present
perfect tense. Note carefully the corresponding uses for present and past time:
It's the first time I've spoken to a pop star.
It was the first time I'd spoken to a pop star.
You will see that for future time we use the same tense (have spoken) as for
present time; we do not use the tense one might expect, namely the future
perfect (1Bg).
n The more important exceptions to the non-use of will after conditional links are
as follows:
i When we request or hope that people will do something (13).
ii When we use will not to mean refuse (11Bf): 'If Sheila won't do it, I'll
ask Helen.'
iii When a future condition can be satisfied (at least as far as we are
concerned) in the present:
Shopper: Provided this sleeping bag will keep me warmer than
the others I'll buy it, although it's the most expensive.
Assistant: It definitely will.
Shopper: OK, I'll buy it.
Exercise 1C p.23
Choose a correct tense for each verb in brackets. Where there is no verb
(____), give the correct auxiliary such as does or has.
Zena(l go) to Paris to work in a fashion show and (2 not |be) back until next
week. When I (3 see) her off at the airport this morning she (4 look) forward to it
very much. Although she (5 go) there once as a very small girl she (6 not |
remember) it, and so in a sense this (7 be) the first time she (8 be) there.
23
1C VERB TENSES
Robert (21 go) around recently saying that he (22 think) people who (23 go)
to university (24 have) a great advantage over those who (25 ____not).
(26 mean |this) that he (27 think) of going to university himself? If it
(28 ____) and if he actually (29 succeed) in getting there, he (30 do) what
his father always (31 want) him to do, partly because he never (32 have) the
chance of doing it himself. But I (33 doubt) if Robert (34 get) a university place
all that easily if he (35 not |improve) his academic qualifications. He (36 leave)
school over a year ago with poor grades, and unless he now (37 go) to a college
and (38 work) hard to get better ones, few universities (39 accept) him. The
trouble is that Robert is not the sort of person who (40 find) it easy to start
studying again.
Robert (41 prefer) sport to books, and since leaving school (42 continue) to play a
lot of football. In fact the manager of the local team says he (43 consider) Robert
for a place in it provided he (44 train) hard. And here (45 lie) another of Robert's
problems: he is a sociable, easy-going sort of chap with a strong streak of laziness
in his character, whether we (46 talk) of study
or sport. Unless he (47 take) regular exercise - which he seldom (48 _____) -
he (49 tend) to run to fat, even at his age. Until he (50 spend) less time eating and
chatting idly with friends, he (51 not |become) the professional footballer he
sometimes (52 dream) of being. Whichever he (53 choose), university or football,
he (54 have) to discipline himself. However, a self-disciplined Robert is someone
I (55 find) hard to imagine; I (56 feel) that even if it (57 cost) him a career he (58
go) on being the same Robert, which (59 mean) that by the time he (60 be) thirty
he (61 be) really fat!
My son (62 study) medicine for six years and (63 take) his final
examinations in two months' time. Provided he (64 pass) them, he
(65 specialise) in psychiatry, which (66 take) another two years' study at
least. So he (67 not | be) ready to practise full time until he (68 be) nearly
thirty. By then he (69 study) for a total of eight or nine years and (70 earn)
practically nothing. Until now his wife (71 work) and (72 support) him, but
she (73 expect) a baby in four months and so she (74 give up) her job soon.
What on earth they (75 live) on when she (76 stop) working I do not know.
But they (77 not |worry) about it. My daughter-in-law says that they
(78 manage) somehow, while my son says simply that he (79 quality) as a
psychiatrist however long it (80 take).
24
VERB TENSES ID
When people retire they quite rightly think that if they (81 work) hard for
most of their lives they (82 earn) the right to a bit of comfort in their old
age.
Unfortunately, unless they (83 qualify) for pensions indexed to the cost of
living, they will be among those who (84 suffer) most if there (85 be) bad
inflation in the future.
'So long as political leaders (86 keep) their heads a third world war
(87 not |be) inevitable.'
'Whether they (88 keep) their heads or not, they (89 find) it almost
impossible to prevent world war unless they (90 succeed) in abolishing the
international arms trade.'
'My prediction is that providing a nuclear holocaust (91 not |occur) by the end
of the century, mankind (92 pass) the danger point.'
'You're too complacent. Even if your prediction (93 prove) correct, there
(94 always |be) a risk of man destroying himself.'
'I (95 come) with you only if you (96 drive) more slowly than you usually
(97 ____).'
'I promise I (98 ). Jump in! You can put the handbrake on immediately
you (99 think) I (100 go) too fast.'
25
1D VERB TENSES
In the rest of the sentence (that is to say, after a link such as if), we use one of
the past tenses already dealt with in 1B, with the important difference that for
supposition a past tense does not relate directly to time; as we see from the
example above (was), it may have a future reference. Sometimes the
subjunctive were is used instead of was; and could or might may be used
instead of a conditional tense. Possible combinations of these tenses and
verbs are given below.
Thus we see that conditional sentences consist of two parts. These are
called CLAUSES . The one beginning with the link is the CONDITIONAL CLAUSE
(since it expresses the condition), while the other is the MAIN CLAUSE .* As the
Examples here and in 1C show, either clause may come first in a sentence,
but under tense use (see below) the main-clause tense is listed first. For
clarity, the tenses are set out in full, without colloquial contraction ( she'd be
working etc.).
To remind you of the conditional links mentioned in 1C, these are as
follows:
if, providing, provided (that), as/so long as, unless, supposing, even if,
whether ... or, however (late etc.), no matter how, whoever etc., no
matter who etc., any ... (that)
Examples 1D p.26
TIME REFERENCE TENSE USE
* In some grammar books, what is called a dependent or subordinate clause (for example, a conditional
clause) is defined as part of a main clause. In this book main and dependent clauses are separate parts of a
sentence.
26
VERB TENSES ID
Explanation 1D p.26
a Reference (1) is to a supposed or hypothetical present, that is to say, to one
which does not exist. Note the tense use:
Main clause: CONDITIONAL (would be working)
Conditional clause: PAST(was)
The use of the progressive form (would be working) corresponds to its use
for FACT:
Brenda is here; she is working in the office next door.
After if, even if or unless the subjunctive were is a common alternative to
was, and in the expression:
If I was/were you I would/should ...
it is probably the more common of the two. However, were is seldom used
after the other conditional links.
b Reference (2) is to a future that is supposed or hypothetical for one of
several reasons:
i We do not think it probable or do not consider it seriously (Example 2).
Compare the following, where the tense use (see 1C) shows that the
same future possibility is either considered probable or, if improbable,
is taken seriously as something that may happen:
If she leaves her job tomorrow she will get some pension.
ii We consider future possibilities seriously, but have not yet made up our
minds what to do:
Why not ask her now? She would still be at home if we phoned
straight away.
iii We want to be polite, and therefore approach the future cautiously, as
supposition rather than possible fact:
Would it be all right if I used your phone?*
This is more polite than 'Will it be all right if I use your phone?'
Tense use for the supposed future is the same as for the supposed present,
except that as alternatives we can use was to/were to or should in the
conditional clause after if, even if or unless. These alternative uses are
generally more formal in style than the standard use:
If she was to/were to leave her job tomorrow she would ...
If she should leave her job tomorrow she would ...
Should can also be used in a conditional sentence like that in i above:
If she should leave her job tomorrow she will...
*
Note a variation using the infinitive instead of a clause: 'Would it be possible (for me etc.) to use your
phone?'(See 1Fd.)
27
1D VERB TENSES
The probable effect of should here is to make the sentence less 'factual' and
more 'suppositional' like Example 2. But whether it is used with will or would
in the main clause, should after if has nothing to do with ought or the
conditional tense; it can not be replaced by would (not 'If she would leave her
job tomorrow she will/would ...') and it can not be contracted to 'd (see 11Fe).
c Reference (3) is to a supposed or hypothetical past which never existed. Note
the tense use:
Main clause: CONDITIONAL PERFECT (would have got)
Conditional clause: PAST PERFECT (had stayed) For
the conditional link however long, see 1Ce.
d Mixed reference (4,5) occurs in many conditional sentences. The main clause
may have one reference, for example to the supposed present, and the
conditional clause another reference, perhaps to the supposed past (4); or the
references may be reversed (5). Tenses are used accordingly. Here are mixed
future-past references:
I would come with you tomorrow if I hadn't already promised to go
out with Denis.
I would have accepted your invitation if I wasn't going out with Denis
tomorrow.
Sometimes the conditional or past tense is 'shifted back' to the conditional
perfect or past perfect to give a sentence with uniform tense use:
I would have come with you tomorrow if I hadn't already
promised ...
I would have accepted your invitation if I hadn't been going out
... tomorrow.
f Could normally replaces would be able to, expressing ability: could make
= would be able to make. With the perfect infinitive (7) it replaces the
conditional perfect tense (would have been able to make).
g We have already seen (1Cf) that links like any time (that) can be the
equivalent of conditional links like whenever. Similarly, any career (that) (7)
can be the equivalent of whatever career and act as a conditional link in a
supposition (= If she had chosen any career at all she could have made a
success of it). Here are some more examples:
I'd give a reward to anyone who (= to whoever) found my necklace.
They'd have done anything (= whatever) she'd asked.
28
VERB TENSES 1D
These links are DEFINING RELATIVES (see 8Ab). Sometimes they are more precise
in meaning than -ever forms:
I'd punish any child of mine who (not whoever) did a thing like that.
For my holiday I'd choose a nice seaside resort that (not wherever)
promised some sun.
NON-DEFINING RELATIVES (8Aa) cannot act as conditional links.
h Would against should. Like shall (1Br), conditional should may be used with
the first persons (I, we), but as it can be confused with should in its other uses
(11C,E,F) it is generally better to use would for the conditional tense. In either
case the distinction between conditional would and should often disappears,
since contraction to 'd is normal in informal English (see 1F, Examples).
Exercise 1D p.29
Use correct tenses for the verbs in brackets. These include tenses for fact
(1B,C) as well as for supposition. Where there is no verb (____), give the
correct auxiliary like could or did.
'As long as you (1 be) sure it (2 be) perfectly convenient, 1 (3 call) round
tomorrow to see Miss Pearl as you (4 just [suggest).' 'I (5 not |suggest) it unless it
(6 be) convenient. If you (7 want) to come on Friday it (8 be) a different matter;
Brenda (9 be) too busy to see you.'
Sheila teaches only the younger children at her school, but I think she (10 be)
equally successful no matter who she (11 teach). I hear that however ill-behaved
and uncooperative her classes (12 be) in the beginning, she always (13 win) them
round in the end.
'If I (14 be) a successful doctor like you I (15 not |do) what you've done: I (16 not
|go)and live in a town I (17 not |like), however much the people (18 need) me.'
'If I (19 not |be) a doctor I (20 agree) with you. I (21 live) near my family and
friends, not where my fellow citizens (22 need) me most. But I am a doctor, and if
I (23 do) that my skills would be wasted. And if I felt that was happening, how
(24 justify |I) my choice of career?'
I don't keep a dog or a cat because if I (25 ____) I (26 have to) find someone
to look after it whenever I (27 go) away, and as I travel a lot on business that (28
be) a nuisance. However, when I (29 get) married, which I (30 expect) to do quite
soon, I (31 keep) one.
Even if I (32 have) all the money in the world I (33 not | be) happier than lam
now. Providing one (34 have) reasonably good health, it (35 be) possible to be
happy with very few material possessions. I hope I (36 continue) to think as I do
however rich I (37 get).
29
1D VERB TENSES
'Do you think pigs (38 fly) if they (39 have) wings?'
'I don't think they (40 ____); their weight (41 be) all in the wrong place.*
But what a silly question! If pigs (42 have) wings they (43 not |be) pigs!'
If we (44 live) on grass we (45 need) a special stomach like a cow's and teeth
that (46 chew) vegetable matter more efficiently than ours. In addition we
(47 need) to spend a great deal more time eating than we (48 ____) now.
'If we (49 fit) ourselves with an extra heart, (50 not |do |we) a lot more work?' 'I
don't know. We (51 be |able) to do more physical work. But whether we (52
have) an extra heart or not, we (53 not |do) more mental work without an extra
brain. The trouble is that some people (54 use) an extra brain to avoid doing extra
work.'
If it (55 not |be) for Napoleon Bonaparte, who (56 make) his cavalry ride on the
right side of the road, the whole world (57 now |drive) on the left, as they
(58 ____) in Japan, India, Australia and Britain. The left, after all, (59 be)
the right side to drive for right-handed people.
The entire history of the world, says French writer Pascal, (60 be) different if
Queen Cleopatra of Egypt (61 have) a shorter nose. Presumably he means that
Julius Caesar and Mark Antony (62 not | fall) in love with her, and so (63 spend)
their energies on different conquests.
'Unless you (64 leave) by the time I (65 count) ten, 'he shouted, 'I (66 call) the
police!'
'I (67 have) no intention of leaving, whatever you (68 count) and whoever you
(69 call),' I replied. 'If you (70 know) anything about the law, which you clearly
don't, you (71 realise) I have as much right here as you have. Why
(72 not |mind |you) your own business? If you (73 ____), the world (74 be) a
better place.'
'My colleague Brenda Pearl nearly (88 get) married a few years ago. I doubt
whether she (89 now | work) with me if she (90 ____). I almost certainly
(91 lose) a wonderful assistant.'
* Note that a conditional sentence may consist only of one or more main clauses when the conditional
clause is understood from the context, and is therefore not stated. Such sentences occur here and later in
the Exercise.
30
VERB TENSES IE
'You (92 ____), but on the other hand you (93 ____ |not). Even if she
(94 get) married, I am sure she (95 now |work) somewhere.'
'Someone (96 damage) the photocopier.'
'I (97 not |be) a bit surprised if it (98 be) Denis. It (99 not |be) the first time he
(100 do) it.'
Examples 1E p.31
TIME REFERENCE TENSE USE
* In this book the word PHRASE is used loosely to mean a group of related words.
31
1E VERB TENSES
Explanation 1E p.32
a Where we would use a present tense for fact ('Brenda is here; she is working
in the office next door'), we use (1) wish or if only with the PAST tense or
subjunctive were for an unfulfilled wish.
b Could (2) usually replaces was/were able to (see e below).
c Where we might use the future tense for possible fact ('I expect Brenda will
get in touch; she'll probably phone me'), we use (3) wish or if only with the
CONDITIONAL tense for a wish that we hope will be fulfilled. Compare the use
of wish or want with the infinitive (wish being the more formal and the less
common of the two):
I want/wish Brenda to phone me.
Here we have what is almost a command, which we expect to be fulfilled.
d Where we would use the present perfect or past tense for fact ('Brenda hasn't
gone to London; she stayed here'), we use (4) wish or if only with the
PAST PERFECT tense.
e After wish or if only, could have (5) usually replaces had been able to.
32
VERB TENSES 1E
Compare 1Df, where we have seen that could and could have replace would be
able to and would have been able to respectively.
f It is time is followed only by the PAST tense to express a wish. This may be a
wish unfulfilled in the present (6) or that may or may not be fulfilled in the
future (7). Compare the use of it is time with the infinitive to express a fact that
is in the nature of a command:
It is time (for you) to come back.
g Would rather (6,7) is essentially similar regarding tense use to it is time.
However, although uncommon, its use with the past perfect tense to
express a wish unfulfilled in the past can occur:
I would rather Brenda had gone to London last week (than this week).
For the use of would rather with the plain infinitive, see 9g.
Exercise 1E p. 33
Choose a correct tense for the verbs in brackets. As well as tenses used to express
wish, some of the tenses required are those used for fact (1B,C) or for
supposition (1D). Where there is no verb (____), give the correct auxiliary,
such as can or would.
Sheila, whose mother is ill, wishes she (1 get) better so that they could go on
holiday together next month. She says she (2 ____) rather go with her than
with anyone else.
'If only,' some people say, 'the world (3 be) a kinder place than it is!' It's time such
people (4 realise) that charity begins at home and (5 act) accordingly.
'If only/ thinks Georgina's husband, 'I (6 get) Georgina to sew or read a book! I
wish she (7 learn) to enjoy domestic life a bit more and (8 not |want) to go out
every evening.'
I would always rather people (9 think) me a rogue than a fool. Rogues are
quite popular at parties and other social gatherings, whereas if people (10
think) you are stupid they never (11 ask) you anywhere.
I wish I (12 call) round to see you tomorrow, but I don't think 1(13 ____). I
(14 let) you know, though, if there is any change of plan.
'Don't you wish your late aunt (15 leave) you some money when she died?'
'Not really. If she (16 ____) I expect I (17 give) it away. I (18 ____) rather
any money of mine (19 be) earned than inherited.'
'I wish I (20 be) as artistic as you. Then* I (21 spend) all my time painting
beautiful scenery.'
'If you think art is just painting beautiful scenery, it's time you (22 learn)
something about it!'
* See footnote on p. 34.
33
1F VERB TENSES
'It's high time someone (23 tell) Denis how objectionable he is.'
'I wish you (24 not/criticise) Denis behind his back all the time.
He's not so bad. I'd rather he (25 become) my son-in-law than Ken, for
example.'
'What's wrong with Ken? If you (26 know) him as well as I do, you
(27 realise) he's worth ten Denises.'
'Oh, I wish you (28 stop) weighing people up like lumps of meat!'
Sir James thinks it's time his son Toby (29 get) a proper job and (30 begin) to
think seriously about a career. Of course Sir James would rather Toby (31 work)
in his own firm than anywhere else, but in any case he wishes he (32 adopt) a
more positive attitude towards life.
People often wish they (33 choose) a different career when they were young. 'If
only,' they say, 'I (34 do) what I really wanted to do!' Or: 'I wish I (35 listen) to
so-and-so's advice.' Well, the truth of the matter often is that if they (36 have)
their lives over again they (37 choose) the same.
'I must say I wish I (38 be) born a bird and not a human. Then* I (39 not |have
to) come in to work this morning. And I (40 have) more freedom to go where I
pleased when I pleased. I (41 migrate) last autumn if I (42 want) to!' 'You do talk
a lot of nonsense. It's time you (43 come) to terms with life as it is. If you (44 be)
born a bird, you (45 be) dead at your age.'
Examples
A1 I'd like to learn to play the piano. I wish
I knew a good teacher who lived near
here and who'd give/could give
me lessons.
Bl Suppose I gave you lessons. What would NON-FACT a, d
you say?
A2 Oh, if only you would/could! I'd rather
you taught me than any other teacher.
B2 I'd teach you only if you practised.
* The adverb then here replaces a missing conditional clause If ... (see footnote on p. 30).
34
VERB TENSES 1F
Explanation 1F p.35
a The dialogue consists largely of wishes and suppositions (NON-FACT), since the
speakers are feeling their way towards an agreement. Therefore most verbs are
in conditional and past tenses or the subjunctive (were).
b Sometimes, however, the speakers deal in FACT, and then tenses relate to time
except:
i after conditional links like anyone who, no matter who in B2 or time links
like before in A6 (see 1C);
ii in the case of the idiom had better in A6 (see e below).
c Note in particular how the tense varies in B3 and A4 after as if, which is not a
true conditional link (it may be followed by a future tense), but a link for
condition (if) + similarity (as):
It sounds as if you're keen (= I believe you are). FACT
It sounds as if you'd practise (if I taught you, but I may
not). NON-FACT
I'd practise as if it was/were a matter of life and death (but
it wouldn't actually be as serious as all that). NON-FACT
Compare:
It sounds as if you were keen (but I doubt if you are). NON-FACT
It sounds as if you'll practise (when I teach you, which
I've decided to do). FACT
35
1F VERB TENSES
Exercise 1F p.36
Put the verbs in brackets into a correct tense and fill any blanks ( ____) with
a suitable auxiliary verb like would/could in Example A2.
'If only we (1 have) a car! Life (2 be) much more pleasant. Today, for
instance, I (3 like) to have driven into the country to see and hear the spring.
Don't you think it's time you (4 buy) a car and I (5 learn) to drive it?' 'It (6 be)
nice to have a car if it (7 not/be) so expensive. The trouble is that I (8 have to)
give up a Jot of things I now (9 enjoy).'
36
VERB TENSES IF
'(54 ____) you rather I (55 take) my holiday in June next year instead of
later? If I (56 ____) you (57 have) your holiday in July or August, when
your children always (58 have) their school holidays.'
'1(59 be) most grateful if you (60 ____). It (61 be) very nice if the whole
family (62 spend) its holidays together for once. It (63 be) a long time
since
we (64 ____)so.'
Listen, children! I (65 punish) whoever (66 be) late for class tomorrow,
whatever excuse they (67 have). It's not as if I (68 not |warn) you many times
before about unpunctuality, and so if anyone (69 be) late again they (70 know)
what to expect.
'Good heavens! Is anything wrong? You look as though you (71 see)a ghost!'
'If I (72 ____) to tell you that I have, (73 believe |you) me?'
'No, I (74 ____n't). I (75 not |believe) in ghosts. If anyone told me he
37
(76 see) a ghost, I (77 tell) him he only (78 think) he (79 see) one and that he
(80 ____) better pull himself together.'
'I wish you (81 warn) me about Helen before I (82 meet) her.'
'Even if I (83 ____), I doubt whether you (84 take) any notice of what I
(85 say). She always looks as if butter (86 not |melt) in her mouth.'
'Exactly! If only she (87 not |look) so innocent!'
My friend Zena is a very hard-working model, but to hear her talk one (88 think)
she (89 do) nothing but enjoy herself. I often think she (90 do) better to give
herself a less pleasure-loving image.
38
2 Adverbials
1 That cheese has a terrible smell. —> That cheese smells terrible.
VERB WITH ADVERB
2 Take a cautious smell at it and —> Smell it cautiously and see if you
see if you agree. agree.
3 Those men are pretty hard —> Those men work pretty hard on
workers on the whole. the whole.
VERB WITH ADVERB PHRASE
Explanation 2A p.39
a General rule: An ADJECTIVE is used with a VERB to describe the STATE (nature,
condition, appearance etc.) of someone or something (1).*
Otherwise verbs are used with ADVERBS (2). Words that are difficult to deal
with under this general rule are reserved for the explanations preceding
Exercise 2 on p.41-42 (f-h).
b Adjectives normally form their corresponding adverbs by the addition of -ly
(2).† Exceptions are:
i good —> well
ii adjectives ending in -ic, which add -ally: basic —> basically
iii adjectives ending in -able/-ible, in which final -e becomes -y: comfortable
—> comfortably; possible —> possibly
iv adjectives with adverbs of the same form: fast —> fast; hard —>
hard (3).
c Adjectives that themselves end in -ly do not form adverbs by the addition of a
further -ly. Some of them, such as early, monthly, have adverbs of the
* Activity is sometimes needed to maintain a state; or a state may be in the process of change. Therefore
adjectives sometimes occur with verbs that themselves refer to activity in progress (1Bs): 'The children are
being naughty/The sky is getting lighter.'
† Adjectives ending in -y \\\ have -i- in the adverb: clumsy------------> clumsily.
39
2A ADVERBIALS
same form. Others, like friendly (4), have no corresponding adverbs and can
be used with verbs only in an adverb phrase.
d Sometimes, although a corresponding adverb exists, an adverb phrase may
be more common:
I pay a monthly rent —> I pay rent every month/by the month (instead of 'I
pay rent monthly').
e The adjective sly [slai] does not end in -ly [li], and so forms an adverb in the
normal way (see b above).
Exercise 1 2A p.40
Transform the following sentences as shown in the Examples, namely by
changing the nouns with adjectives into their corresponding verbs with
adjectives, adverbs or adverb phrases, as required. In each sentence the
adjective, adverb or adverb phrase will come last.
the general rule (2Aa) are apparently used with adjectives. Such phrases fall into
three categories (see under f, g and h):
f Phrases like run deep (referring to a river), travel light, shut it tight, come
closer are, if we think about them, not describing an action itself but the STATE
(see 2Aa) in which things are, either when they are happening (first two) or
have finished happening (last two). It is therefore not surprising that here in
fact the verbs are being used with adjectives. (Compare affect deeply, tread
lightly, squeeze tightly, examine more closely.) However, the adjectives come
after the verb; before a verb or participle an adverb is used: 'The windows
have all been tightly shut/shut tight.'
g Adverbs which have the same form as their corresponding adjectives (see
2Abiv) often have related forms in -ly with different meanings:
direct by the shortest way or without stopping: fly direct to
Moscow/to Moscow direct; without intermediary: I
contacted the manager direct
directly closely: the matter concerns us directly; exactly: directly
opposite
hard adverb of hard (worker, blow etc.): work hard, hit hard
hardly scarcely, barely: she hardly knew him
high to/at a high level/altitude: prices have risen very high, the
kite flew higher and higher
highly very (much): a highly infectious disease, highly appreciated
advice; very favourably: think highly of someone
(a)loud not to oneself, openly: read aloud, laugh out loud
loudly opposite of quietly, faintly: read loudly, laugh loudly
right correctly: do a sum right; completely: read a book right
through, turn right round; well (with go, come, turn out):
things went right at last
rightly sensibly, wisely: she very rightly refused; justly, rightfully:
act rightly towards one's neighbours
sharp at right angles: turn sharp left/right
sharply quickly, abruptly: turn sharply, speak sharply to someone
short without finishing: stop short, fall short of the target
shortly soon: she'll be arriving shortly
wrong incorrectly: do a sum wrong; badly (with go): things went
wrong
wrongly mistakenly, unwisely: / think she decided wrongly;
unjustly, wrongfully: act wrongly towards one's neighbours
As in f above, it is normally only the -ly forms that can come before a verb: 'It
directly concerns us.' A common exception is clean meaning
41
2A ADVERBIALS
completely: 'I clean forgot about it.' (The adverb cleanly meaning in a clean
way exists but is seldom used.) Wrongly as well as wrong is sometimes used
for incorrectly: 'You've added the figures up wrong/wrongly.' In 'He did
wrong/right' we are using a verb not with an adjective or adverb but with a
noun, as in the phrase do harm/good.
h MISCELLANEOUS: There are one or two idioms such as go slow (= avoid strain or
excess) and going strong (= thriving, flourishing) which do not fall into the
above categories. In the pair bad/badly, bad is an adjective which may be used
with a verb to describe a state (2Aa): 'The food went ( = became) bad.'
(Compare 'The food tasted good.') The adverb badly, as we have seen from the
uses of right and wrong (g), is the opposite of the adverb* well: 'Things went
(= progressed) badly.' (Compare 'Things went well.') Flat is used with the
verb fall as an adjective (see f) in both literal and figurative senses: 'He fell
flat on his face./His jokes fell flat (= were unsuccessful).' The adverb flatly
means absolutely: 'They flatly refused to pay.'
Exercise 2 2A p.42
With the above notes and examples in mind, read or write out the following,
choosing from each pair of words the one you think should be used. Remember
that before a verb or participle it is the -ly form that is used.
I remarked that it was better to approach Ken (1) direct/directly and not through
his secretary. His secretary laughed out (2) loud/loudly at my remark. I think
really she was (3) deep/deeply offended by what I'd said.
Old Mr Elkins is still going (4) strong/strongly although he's over ninety. He says
he'd like to reach a hundred, but admits he may be aiming a bit (5) high/ highly.
However, there's a (6) wide/widely held belief in the village that he'll get there.
Georgina was about to say something but stopped (7) short /shortly, and her eyes
opened (8) wide/widely with amazement. Somewhere in the house a horse had
neighed (9) loud/loudly.
'He told me to turn (10) sharp/sharply left just past the station.'
'If he told you that he told you (11) wrong/wrongly. But you got here in the end
even though you were (12) wrong/wrongly directed.'
(13) Faint /Faintly in the distance we heard the noise of thunder. Then the radio
went (14) faint/faintly and we could (15) hard/hardly hear the news. We shut all
the windows (16) tight/tightly and waited for the storm.
Marilyn's leaving (17) short/shortly for the United States on a business trip. As
she (18) right /rightly says, there's nothing like personal contact for promoting
42
ADVERBIALS 2A
one's products. Her suitcase is so (19) tight/tightly packed with samples there's
not even room for a toothbrush. She refuses to take two suitcases because she
wants to travel (20) light/lightly.
Ken was driving along at about eighty miles an hour when a stone went (21)
clean /cleanly through the windscreen and hit him in the face. Afterwards he
talked (22) light /lightly of the affair, but he was lucky to escape with his life.
(25) There's a lot more to Willie than one would think: still waters run
(23) deep/ deeply, as they say. I've been following his career (24)
close/closely, and think
high/highly of his ability as an architect. But he's inclined to work too
hard/hardly, and the doctor has recently advised him to go (27) slow/
slowly.
When I took my driving test, the examiner said I had done everything (28)
right/rightly except reversing, when I had turned too (29) sharp/sharply and
mounted the pavement. He (30) strong/ strongly recommended me to practise
in a smaller car than the one I'd been using.
Denis thinks up the most ludicrous schemes, which all fall (31) flat /flatly. Helen's
parents are (32) flat /flatly opposed to any idea of her marrying him. They say he
was (33) direct /directly involved in the recent financial scandal at the Town Hall.
The struggles my parents had in the early years of their marriage brought them
(34) closer /more closely together. Things often went (35) bad/badly for them in
those days, but look at them now! Things turned out (36) right /rightly in the end.
2B Position
Introductory note: In the Examples below, the adverbials are in italics. You
will see that they consist of both single-word adverbs like nearly, eagerly,
yesterday, unfortunately and adverb phrases like with his new rod, in the
Thames, the other day. Adverb phrases nearly always come after the verb and
(if it has one) its object (two dozen fish) in END position (1); or at the beginning
of a sentence in FRONT position (9). Except possibly for their position in relation
to each other (see Explanation a, b), they should give you little or no difficulty.
Single-word adverbs, on the other hand, may occur in the above two positions
or elsewhere in the sentence, and in particular before a verb (2) or after the verb
to be (6) in MID position. Such adverbs include two-word combinations like
very quickly (3), involving an adverb of degree (see below). The following are
the common positions of adverbs according to their meaning or function:
43
2B ADVERBIALS
Examples 2B p.44
ADVERBIALS WRONG (X) AND RIGHT (^J) POSITIONS
1 with his new rod a —> Charles's cousin David caught (X) nearly
two dozen fish (^J) in the Thames last week.
2 eagerly b —> He therefore (^J) went (X) back(X) there
(^J)
yesterday.
3 very quickly c —> Unfortunately he fell in the river and (^J)
got (X) very wet (^J).
4 rapidly d —> His uncle Harry, though, says that's the
best way of (^J) becoming (X) a true
fisherman (^J).
5 already f —> Harry, an expert angler, (X) has (^J) taken
David under his wing (^J).
6 clearly c —> (^J) He (X) is (^J) delighted at David's
enthusiasm.
7 wisely h —> Fishermen, says Harry, are people who (X)
spend their spare time (^J).
8 wisely h —>• His wife Mary doesn't always agree, but
(^J) says nothing (X).
9 too k —> The other day Charles(^J) went fishing (^J).
10 only l —> However, he (^J) fished (^J) for an hour
(^J); his real interest is his model railway and
pop music.
Explanation 2B p.45
a Do not (1) put an adverbial between a verb (caught) and its object (nearly two
dozen fish) except to avoid ambiguity or double meaning:
David caught with his new rod nearly two dozen fish, which he returned
to the river (not David caught nearly two dozen fish with his new rod,
which he returned to the river or ... two dozen fish, which he returned to
the river, with his new rod).
The normal order for adverbials after a verb/object is MPT or manner (with his
new rod), place (in the Thames), time (last week).
b But do not (2) put an adverbial between a verb of motion (went) and common
adverbials of place like here, there, home, to work. Also, if it is a phrasal verb
(16Aa) like go back, do not put an adverbial between the verb itself and its
particle (back). The order may therefore be P(there), M(eagerly), T(yesterday).
c Do not (3), in the case of verbs used with adjectives (2Aa), put an adverbial
between the verb and the adjective (very wet).
d Do not (4) put an adverbial between become and a following noun (a true
fisherman).
e These rules (c, d) do not (6) apply to am, is, are, was, were. Mid-position
adverbs come after these forms of the verb to be except when the verb is
stressed, as in argument ('I disagree: Harry clearly is delighted'), or when
commas are used (see n below).
f Do not put a mid-position adverb in front of the whole verb. It should go after
the auxiliary part of it: is, was etc. in progressive forms, will, have etc. in
future and perfect tenses (5). In tenses with two auxiliaries such as the
conditional perfect (ID), position varies, although adverbs of manner usually
come after the second auxiliary:
I'd soon have/have soon
If Id fallen in lost my enthusiasm for
I I d have rapidly
fishing.
In the passive, manner adverbs generally come after been, other mid-
position adverbs before it:
If Harry had fallen in he'd probably have/have probably been severely
scolded by Mary.
The position of adverbs is the same in relation to modal auxiliaries (11) like
can/could. Instead of the conditional perfect we might have (see 11Af):
David could easily have/have easily been drowned.
(Note that here easily is not an adverb of manner but of comment, like
probably.)
g The above rule (f) does not apply when auxiliaries are stressed ('Yes, I probably
would have lost my enthusiasm') or when they are on their own:
2B ADVERBIALS
'Do you think you would have lost your enthusiasm?' – 'Yes, I probably would
have.'
h Do not (7) put an adverb of manner in front of a verb if it can also be an adverb
of comment. Conversely, do not (8) mistake an adverb of comment for an
adverb of manner and put it after the verb. In 7, wisely tells us how fishermen
spend their time; in 8, wisely is the writer's comment on Mary's behaviour.
Here is another example: 'She treated me kindly' refers to someone's kind
behaviour towards me; 'she kindly treated me' is my favourable comment on a
doctor or dentist who accepted me as her patient.
j All the above rules do not apply to adverbs of degree like nearly (1) and very
(3), which come directly before the words they qualify.
k The adverb of addition too (9) comes after the words it qualifies. Unless these
words are at the end of the sentence, a position directly after them will avoid
any ambiguity. However, in the context of the Examples there can be only one
meaning in whichever position we put too:
i Charles went fishing as well as David (= Charles too went fishing).
But in another context 'Charles went fishing too' might mean:
ii Charles went fishing as well as wind-surfing.
In the spoken language, stress removes any possible ambiguity:
i Charles went fishing too.
ii Charles went fishing too.
(For too as an adverb of degree, see 3B.)
l As regards the adverbs of addition also and as well, the first usually
occupies mid position, where it may refer to words before or after it,
depending on the context or spoken stress. Thus:
Charles also went fishing/Charles also went fishing
corresponds respectively to ki and kii above. As well takes end position, where
it can refer back to various parts of the sentence, so that:
Charles went fishing as well/Charles went fishing as well
is the equivalent of ki or kii according, once again, to context or spoken stress.
The adverb even is also essentially an adverb of addition, but carries with it
the notion of surprise we feel at such an addition being made:
Even Charles went fishing ( = Surprisingly, Charles too went fishing).
It always directly precedes the words it qualifies, and so:
Charles even went fishing
corresponds to kii above.
m The adverb of restriction only comes before or, less commonly, after the words
it qualifies, and if these words are at the end of the sentence a position directly
before them or after them will avoid ambiguity. In 10 the context makes the
meaning clear in whichever of the three positions we put only. But look at the
following:
<u>
ADVERBIALS 2B
Exercise 1 2B p.47
Read or write out the sentences with the adverbials in suitable positions, of which
there may be more than one. (Some of the sentences do not make sense without
the adverbials.)
Exercise 2 2B p.48
In this Exercise, which is an extension of Exercise 1, you have more adverbials to
deal with.
48 •
ADVERBIALS 2B
49
3 Linking: result, cause
Introductory note: LINKING has already been touched upon in relation to tense
use with conditional and time links (1C, D). Conditional sentences were shown
(see 1D, Introductory note) to consist of two parts or clauses, joined by such
words as if to express their conditional relationship. Other sentences too are
structured in this way, but with different methods of joining to express different
relationships, for example RESULT or CAUSE.
The linking or joining used in these various relationships between clauses
involves special link words like and, because, so ... that, although, in spite of, as
or who; verb participles like being or warned; or the infinitive that expresses
purpose. The following seven sections (3-9) deal with these links and also with
adverbs like therefore, then or however which, although they cannot link clauses
within sentences, can indicate corresponding relationships between one sentence
and another.
It is important that as an advanced student of English you should become
familiar with these various links and their related adverbs and how to use them.
A good way of doing this is to learn how to express the same general meaning
with different links and adverbs, and the first five sections (3-7) have this end in
view. The remaining sections (8,9) deal with two distinct forms of linking which
for the most part have no adverbial equivalents.
In this and later sections some of the grammar dealt with is associated with a
formal style of English (see p. 6-7), and where this occurs it is style-marked (=
FML
Formal), as in the following list and in Examples 6 and 7 below, where there is a
change to formal English from result to cause. Also, where there is a choice of
wording, the alternatives that are comparatively more formal are put in special
brackets < >. Thus the first entry on the list tells you that and is an informal
link with or without so, but that with therefore or consequently (marked as
formal in the same list) it is more formal; and in the next entry we see that so is a
more informal link alone than when it is combined with that. The Exercise
instructions on p. 53 indicate those sentences which are in relatively formal
English.
ADVERBS OF RESULT so
therefore
FML consequently
Examples 3A p. 51
RESULT CAUSE
Explanation 3A p.51
a There are two kinds of RESULT, namely material or physical (1,3,4,5) and mental
or psychological (2,6,7). The link so can be used for either kind
51
3A LINKING: RESULT, CAUSE
(1,6), but the full link so that can be used only for the first, not (6) 'I suddenly
noticed I was standing near a bicycle shop, so that....' Both links are used with
a comma and, in spoken English, with a tone change.
(Compare so that for purpose, 4Ac.)
b The two kinds of result correspond to the two kinds of CAUSE: material or
physical cause (1,3,4,5) and psychological causes or reasons (2,6,7). Normally
it is only for reasons that we use verb participles or adjectives (being, aware,
having discovered) as links.
c The link so ... that is used either with adverbs ('I had to wait so long that ...')
or with adjectives (3) when these are not directly followed by nouns (not
'There were so long queues that ...'). The exceptions are the four quantitative
adjectives much, little, many and few, which may be used with so ... that
whether they are followed by nouns (4) or not. Where so and that are
separated by only one or two words, that is often left out (3). (See also d
below.)
d The link such ... that is used with adjectives directly followed by nouns ('There
were such long queues that ...') or with nouns alone when adjectives like great
or tremendous with an abstract (non-material) meaning can be left out as in 5
and in similar phrases, for example such a struggle/nuisance/comfort/help. In
more formal English so ... that sometimes replaces such ... that, but only with
an adjective directly followed by a(n):
Cyclists had so great an advantage that they ...
Like so ... that (3), such ,.. that may be shortened:
Cyclists had such an advantage they....
e Note that so (7) may be a connector adverb (2B) like therefore and
consequently as well as a link (6).
f Of the four causal links, as, since and because can act as links either at the
beginning (2,4) or in the middle (1,3) of sentences. For, on the other hand, can
begin a sentence only if this can be linked to what goes before, as in 5:
Cyclists were moving faster than anyone else. For they had a
tremendous advantage in this sort of traffic.
Otherwise there is little difference between these four links except when we
are responding to the question Why ...? Then only because can be used:
He didn't marry her because she had money; he married her because
he loved her.
Here the question in our minds or actually asked is 'Why did he marry her?'
Note there are no commas, and no corresponding tone change, before
because. Compare the following, where there is an optional comma and
always a tone change:
No, he didn't marry her(,) because/as/for/since she had no money.
52
LINKING: RESULT, CAUSE JA
Here we are answering the question 'Did he marry her?', not the
question why he did not marry her (although we have given the
answer to an unasked question!).
g For the causal link because of, see 6a.
Exercise 3A p. 52
Transform the following by using the words in italics. Most of the transformations
required are as shown in the Examples, that is to say from result to cause and vice
versa, but some are within either category (such ...
that------> so, as------^having etc.). Sentences 25-30 are more formal than the
rest.
1 so ... that As the lecturer spoke very fast I found it difficult to make
any notes.
2 as He also spoke with a strong accent, so that I didn't
understand all he said.
3 so Since he's a very keen fisherman, Mr McArthur spends a
lot of time by the river.
4 knowing Mrs McArthur knows that fishing is in his blood, and so
doesn't try to stop him.
5 because There was a lot of rain last night and many of the roads are
flooded.
6 so (adverb) As the weather forecast is for more rain, I think we should
postpone our trip.
7 so that Two years ago there was such a bad drought that the wells
in our village began to dry up.
8 such ... that Soon there was a great shortage of water and we had to
ration it.
9 since The next plane didn't leave until the evening, and so they
decided to spend the afternoon sightseeing.
10 so ... that However, they soon returned to the airport, as there was
very little to see.
11 for I'd never talked to a film star before, so felt rather
nervous.
12 knowing She knew how I felt and soon put me at my ease.
13 and so As my car wouldn't start I had to take a taxi.
14 realising I realised I'd be late for an appointment and phoned my
secretary.
15 having I was getting rather worried, as I had heard nothing from
my husband for over a week.
53
}B LINKING : RESULT, CAUSE
Use of too
Examples
RESULT WITH and, such ETC. RESULT WITH too
1 Sheila's a sensible driver and —> Sheila's too sensible a driver to
doesn't take risks. take risks. a
2 Helen's such a spendthrift (that) —> Helen's too much of a
she never saves a penny. spendthrift ever to save a
penny. b
3 The ice is rather thin and one —> The ice is too thin to skate on/for
couldn't skate on it. skating. c, d, e
4 Those logs are very heavy; one —> Those logs arc much too heavy
man couldn't possibly lift them. for one man to lift. c, f, g
5 There's an awful lot of violence —> There's far too much violence in
in this film; I don't like it. this film/or my liking/my
taste. d, g
Explanation 3B p. 55
a Too, like so (3Ad), can be used with an adjective followed by a(n) + noun
(1). Again, note the word order: not 'a too sensible driver'. This
construction with too is more common than the corresponding one with so.
b The equivalent of such with a(n) + noun (3Ad) is too much of with
a(n) + noun (2).
c Otherwise too, like so (3Ac). is used with adjectives (3,4) when these are
not followed directly by nouns (not 'It's too thin ice/Those are too heavy
logs'). The exceptions, as in the case of so, are the quantitative adjectives
much, little, many, few: 'There are too many logs for one man to carry.'
d Too expressing result is used either (1-4) with a full infinitive (to take, to
save etc.) or (3,5) with for+ noun. Its use with for + verb-noun or gerund
(10B) should be avoided: not in 4 'too heavy for lifting'. The grammatical
difference between a gerund such as lifting, which refers to an action, and a
noun such as skating that in 3 refers to a particular activity, in this case a
sport, is explained in 10Bj.
e The infinitive is followed if necessary by a preposition (on) which relates it
correctly to the noun at the beginning of the sentence (3): not 'The ice is
too thin to skate' (compare 'He's too fat to skate').
f When, as in 4 (but not in 3), there is a significant change of grammatical
subject (Those logs –> one man), the second subject is introduced into the
too construction by for.
ff
3B LINKING: RESULT, CAUSE
g For emphasis (4, 5), either much or far can precede too.
Use of enough
Examples 3B p.56
RESULT WITH and, such ETC. RESULT WITH enough
1 Sheila's a sensible driver and —> Sheila's a sensible enough driver
doesn't take risks. not to take risks. h, j
2 Do you think Denis would be —> Do you think Denis would be
such a fool/so foolish as to marry fool/foolish enough to marry
Helen? p Helen? h, k
3 The fruit isn't very ripe yet and —> The fruit isn't ripe enough yet to
one couldn't make jam from it. make jam from/for jam-
making. h, l, m, n
4 Now there's quite a lot of ripe —> Now there's enough ripe fruit
fruit, so my mother can start her for my mother to start her jam-
jam-making, making. h, n
Explanation 3B p. 56
h Enough can be either an ADVERB OF DEGREE (1, 2, 3) or an ADJECTIVE OF
QUANTITY (4). As an adverb it comes after the words it qualifies; as an
adjective it comes before the words it qualifies.
j As an adverb, enough (1) can, like too, be used with an adjective and a
singular countable noun (driver). But note the difference in word order: a
sensible enough driver against too sensible a driver.
k The equivalent of such or too much of with a(n) + noun (3Bb) is sometimes
enough of with a(n) + noun:
He's enough of a realist (= realistic enough) not to marry her.
However, the equivalent is more commonly (2) noun + enough without a(n),
because the noun (fool) takes over the function of its corresponding adjective
(foolish). If there is no corresponding adjective, neither construction with a
noun is normally used: not 'spendthrift enough' or 'enough of a spendthrift' as
the equivalent of such/too much of a spendthrift.
l An adjective + enough (3) comes, like too/so + adjective, after uncountable or
plural nouns: not 'There isn't ripe enough fruit'. Little/few + enough is an
occasional exception ('There's little enough sense in the man, so he may
marry her') but cannot properly be used to express result with an infinitive or
for (see m below).
56
LINKING: RESULT, CAUSE 3B
m Enough expressing result is followed like too either by a full infinitive (1-4) or
by for+ noun (3). Once again (see d), gerunds must be distinguished from
nouns ending in -ing. Thus we could say 'I don't think he's mature enough to
marry/for marriage' but not '... mature enough for marrying.' Marrying is here
a gerund referring to an action, unlike jam-making (3,4), which is a noun
referring to a particular activity.
n What is said above under too (e, f) applies equally to enough regarding a
preposition such as from (3) and the use of for to introduce a second subject
(4).
p Note (2) that in asking questions about people's intentions it is normal to use
such/so ... as + infinitive instead of so ... that (3Ac) as a link for result. Its most
common use is in making a polite request: 'Would you be so kind as to (help
me with my luggage etc.)?' This often converts to: 'Would you be kind enough
to ...?'
Exercise 1 3B p.67
Express the following using too as shown in the Examples.
57
3B LINKING: RESULT, CAUSE
Exercise 2 3B p.58
Express the following using enough as shown in the Examples.
Exercise 3 3B p. 58
The first Examples under too and enough above will have shown you that it is
sometimes possible to express the same result with either of them:
Sheila's too sensible a driver to —> Sheila's a sensible enough driver
take risks. <— - not to take risks.
This is because enough, unlike too, can be used with not. However, a negative
58
LINKING: RESULT, CAUSE 3B
infinitive (not to) as used in the example above often cannot be used. Usually the
not goes with the main verb, and we can then often express the same result with
too or enough by using contrasting adverbs or adjectives:
The ice was just a bit too thin to —> The ice wasn't quite thick
skate on. <— - enough to skate on.
Occasionally contrasting adjectives make it possible to use either form of
negative with enough to obtain the same meaning, although with slightly
different emphasis:
Surely she's sensible enough not - —> Surely she's not fool(ish) enough
to marry the man ? <— - to marry the man ?
With the above in mind, express the following using enough. You will have to
find a contrasting adverb or adjective for most of them.
59
4 Linking: purpose
4A Standard constructions
LINKS to <so as to/in order to>
so as not to <in order not to>
so that <in order that>
in case
ADVERBS then
otherwise
Introductory note: The Examples will show that, just as there is a relation
between result and cause (3A), so there is a relation between purpose on the one
hand and result and cause on the other when links for the latter are used with
verbs like want and with may/might. (For an introductory note on linking and
style marking, see 3.)
Examples
RESULT, CAUSE; then, otherwise PURPOSE
60
LINKING'.PURPOSE 4A
Explanation 4A p.61
a The full link for purpose in a sentence (1) where there is no change of
grammatical subject (We) is so as to or in order to. However, this is usually
shortened in informal English, so that purpose is then expressed only with the
full infinitive (to catch etc.).
b The negative link in a sentence (2) where there is no change of subject is so as
not to or in order not to. Neither link can be shortened.
c The link in a sentence (3) where there is a change of subject (I—> you) is so
that or in order that. So that is normally distinguished from the similar link for
result (3Aa) by its use without comma or tone change and by its use with
can/could (3) or will/would (4, 5). (In more formal English you will sometimes
see it used with shall/should or may/might.) Although that is often dropped in
spoken English ('I'll lend you Sheila's alarm clock so you can be sure ...'), the
full link so that is normal in written English. Either so that or, more formally,
in order that can begin a sentence: 'So that you can be sure of waking up in
time, I'll ...' This is another difference between so that used for purpose and so
that used for result.
d When our purpose (4, 5) is to PREVENT what may or might happen (see left-hand
Examples), we very often use in case instead of so as not /so that... not. In
case, like if (1C), is used with present or past (including perfect) tenses, not
with future tenses; and it is sometimes used with should (11Fe):
'I'll leave/I left a note for Sheila in case she should think. ...'
e When our purpose (6) is to PREPARE for what may or might happen
(because we cannot prevent it), we use only in case, not so as not/so that... not.
f When our expression of purpose (7) begins negatively ('I shan't...'), we must use
in case for PREVENTION as well as for PREPARATION.
g Formal alternatives to in case are lest and for fear that. You will probably come
across them in your reading, but will have no real need for them in your active
vocabulary. They are normally used with should or the present subjunctive
(11Fe): 'A spare tyre is always provided lest a puncture (should) occur.'
h Although you may see in some dictionaries that if is given as one of the
meanings of in case, you are recommended to keep the uses and meanings of
these two links quite distinct, as indeed they generally are; if instead of in
61
4A LINKING: PURPOSE
case in Examples 4-7 above would make no sense at all. Neither should
you confuse in case with in case of, a more formal prepositional phrase
which does have the meaning of if: 'In case of difficulty ( = if you have
any difficulty), ring for the attendant.'
Exercise 4A p.62
Transform the following into sentences expressing purpose, giving
alternative links where possible as shown in Examples 4 and 5.
1 We're going to the coast because we want to get some photos of sea birds.
2 Don't go climbing up the cliff as you may fall.
3 We want to get good photos, so we'll have to climb the cliff.
4 We're leaving early. Then we won't have to hurry.
5 We don't want to skid on the wet roads, so we're going to drive slowly.
6 We're taking food with us, because we may be home late.
7 It may rain and so we'd better take our waterproofs with us.
8 And leave the heating on. Then the house won't get cold while we're out.
9 And put the food away. Otherwise the cat may get it.
10 I won't shut the front door as the cat may want to come in.
11 We're going to cut a hole in the back door, because we want the cat to be
able to get in and out as it likes.
12 Hadn't you better cut a hole in the front door? It may want to get in and
out that way as well.
13 I'm not taking my holiday next week after all, as I may have to fly to
Milan
on business.
14 I'd better come into the office on Sunday, as I'll need to prepare the
necessary papers.
15 My assistant Brenda will keep in touch with you; then you'll know where
lam.
16 I thought it might freeze tonight, so I've drained the water out of my car.
17 Why don't you put antifreeze in it? Then you wouldn't have to bother
about such things.
18 Please talk quietly. Otherwise you may wake the baby.
19 Personally I always keep my baby up late. Then he's really tired by the
time I put him to bed.
20 I'm sure Denis is marrying Helen only because he wants to have an
influential father-in-law.
21 Yes, and Helen's trying to get a job as a teacher just because she wants to
impress Denis.
22 When I'm away I shall telephone my husband every evening. Otherwise
he may think I'm having too good a time.
62
*
LINKING: PURPOSE 4B
23 Let me know when you're going. Then I can keep your husband company
if he's lonely.
24 Sir James tried to persuade his son Toby to enter the family business
because he wanted him eventually to take it over.
25 He would also have liked him to learn Arabic and Chinese, for then he
would have been a real asset to the firm.
26 Zena wanted me to feed her alligator while she was away, so she gave me
the key to her flat.
27 I shouldn't have gone near it if I'd been you, as I would have been afraid of
its snapping my hand off.
28 Where can I find Harry McArthur? I must give him an important message.
29 You'd better go down to the river. He may be fishing.
30 He sometimes goes straight there from work. He saves time that way.
4B Shortened constructions
Introductory note: It is common in some contexts to express purpose by means
of constructions that are shorter than the standard ones (shown below in the left-
hand Examples) and which are exceptions to the rule (4Ac); that is to say, they
use only the full infinitive in spite of the fact that there is a change of grammatical
subject (from you to I etc.). The Examples cover the several forms these
constructions take. They usually describe some sort of transaction or arrangement,
and contain verbs like lend, give, leave or send.
Examples 4B p.63
STANDARD CONSTRUCTION SHORTENED CONSTRUCTION
1 Could you lend me that book so —> Could you lend me that book to
that I could show it to my dad ? show (to) my dad ? b
2 Yes, and I'll give you this paper —> Yes, and I'll give you this paper
so that you can wrap the book to wrap the book up in. c
up (in it).
3 I'll leave the book here so that —> I'll leave the book here (for you)
you can pick it up on your way to pick up on your way
home. home. d
4 Mary McArthur sent her son —> Mary McArthur sent her son
shopping so that he would be shopping to be out of the
out of the way. way. e
5 Yes, she sent him out so that she —> Yes, she sent him out so as to get
could get some peace. some peace. e
63
4B LINKING: PURPOSE
Explanation 4B p.64
a You will see (1-5) that the main clauses (Could you lend me that book?
etc.) in both standard and shortened constructions are the same.
b If in the standard construction (1) the subject (I) and object (it) in the so
that clause occur as objects (me, that book) in the main clause, they are left
out of the shortened construction.
c If in the standard construction (2) the object (the book) in the so that clause
does not occur as an object in the main clause, it occurs in the shortened
construction. Sometimes a preposition (in) is necessary to relate it to an
object (the paper) in the main clause (= 'so that you can wrap the book up
in it' not 'so that it can wrap the book up'). Compare 'I'll lend you my
secretary to type your letters' and 'I'll lend you my typewriter to type your
letters with.'
d If in the standard construction (3) the subject (you) in the so that clause
does not occur as an object in the main clause, it is usually necessary to
introduce it into the shortened construction by the use of for. It is not
always necessary, since the context ('on your way home') may make the
meaning clear.
e Examples 4 and 5 show us that, since we may use only the full infinitive in
the shortened construction when the SUBJECTS in the standard construction
are different (Mary McArthur, he), we may have to add so as (or in order)
to the full infinitive when the SUBJECTS are the same (she) in order to avoid
being misunderstood. Without so as the shortened construction in 5 might
mean 'She sent him out so that he could get some peace.'
Exercise 4B p.64
Transform the following standard constructions with so that into shortened
constructions with the full infinitive, using so as (or in order) only where
necessary, as shown in the Examples.
1 Please send me some samples of your firm's products so that I can show
them to my customers.
2 When we go out we always leave our dog at home so that he can guard it
for us.
3 Sheila lent her sister a skirt so that she could wear it at Helen's party.
4 Marilyn is bringing some magazines with her this afternoon so that I can
take them to my aunt in hospital.
5 If you're going out, buy some postcards so that we can send them off
before we leave Rome tomorrow.
6 I'll get you a basket so that you can carry all those things.
7 Give me a nail so that I can hang this picture up.
8 Put the salmon in the freezer so that we can eat it next weekend.
64
LINKING: PURPOSE 4B
9 I'm going to put this notice here so that everyone'll see it as they walk in.
10 We're gathering our old toys together so that Sheila can give them to
orphan children next Christmas.
11 As I'm arriving at the airport in the early hours of the morning, my wife's
leaving our car there so that I can drive home.
12 I didn't put that book there so you could pinch it but so that Willie could
have a look at it during lunch.
13 When we go to town we always leave our children in the municipal play
ground so that they can amuse themselves on the swings and roundabouts.
14 We also leave them there so that we can do the shopping undisturbed.
15 I've asked my secretary to stay at the office so that she can cope with visit
ors while I see to the arrangements for the banquet over here.
16 I'll get her over here later so that she can help me with the arrangements.
17 In the meanwhile I'm leaving her there so that I can be free to concentrate
on things over here.
18 Our parents sent us all to Britain when we were quite young so that we
could learn English.
19 They sent us so that they could learn English from us afterwards.
20 Personally I think they sent us there so that we'd learn to stand on our
own feet.
65
5 Linking: concession
,
Examples 5 p.66
ADVERBS, but, yet LINKS
1 A strike of all transport workers —> Although a strike of all transport
was called for today(,) but the <— workers was called for today,
bus drivers didn't join it. a the bus drivers didn't join it. a
66
LINKING: CONCESSION 5
2 There weren't any trains this —> Even though there weren't any
morning(,) (and) yet most people «— trains this morning, most people
managed to get to work managed to get to work
somehow. a somehow. a, f, g
3 Quite a lot of commuters went in —> Though quite a lot of commuters
by bus or taxi. Most of them, «— went in by bus or taxi, most of
though,/But most of them used them used their cars or
their cars or walked. b, e walked. b
4 We'd very much like to see an —> Much as we'd like to see an end
end to the strike. All the same(,) <— to the strike, we don't think the
<Even so(,)/However,> we don't Government should give way to
think the Government should the strikers. c
give way to the strikers. e
5 The train drivers' claims may be FML—> Justified as/though the train
justified. However, FML<— drivers' claims may be, they
<Nevertheless(,)> they should not should not have taken industrial
have taken industrial action, e action. d
Explanation 5 p.67
a Although (1) and even though (2) are approximate equivalents, but even
though is more emphatic; that is to say, it is associated with a stronger element
of contradiction or surprise (see Introductory note). Similarly, yet (2) is more
emphatic than but (1). Like but (3), it may be used as a connector adverb at the
beginning of a sentence: 'Yet most people managed to get to work somehow.'
These uses of yet are of course quite separate from its use as an adverb of
relative time (2B).
b Though (3) as a LINK is a more informal equivalent of although (but see d
below). It must be carefully distinguished from though (3) as ADVERB, which (i)
cannot link clauses (see 3A Introductory note), (ii) cannot begin a clause or
sentence, and (iii) is always used with commas (2Bn).
c Much as (4) can be used only with verbs expressing one's inclinations, such
as like, dislike, admire, approve, disapprove, sympathise, enjoy.
d As or though (but not although) may be used (5) after an introductory adjective
or past participle (justified) in a special form of inversion ( = Although the
train drivers' claims may be justified ...). As, but not though, also occurs in the
formal phrase 'Try as one (etc.) might ( = although one tries/tried very hard)':
Try as she might, she could not convince him of the truth.
e Of the adverbs (3,4,5), all the same, even so and nevertheless are the more
emphatic (see a above) and would be unsuitable in 3. These three adverbs can
be used on their own (4,5) or to reinforce but:
We'd very much like to see an end to the strike, but all the same we don't
think the Government should give way to the strikers.
67
•> LINKING: CONCESSION
However, like though, is always used with commas (2Bn), which help to
distinguish it from the conditional link (1Ce).
f Even though and even if are sometimes given as equivalents in dictionaries
and elsewhere. However, it is better to keep them separate, the first for
concession, the second as a conditional link (1Cb). Thus 'He wouldn't* give
up motor-racing even though his wife begged him to' should refer to past fact,
whereas 'He wouldn't give up motor-racing even if his wife begged him to' is
future supposition (1Db).
g In the Examples the linked clauses have all been placed first but, like causal
clauses (3A), often come second in a sentence: 'Most people managed to get
to work somehow(,) even though there were no trains.'
h For but in its use for contrast, see 91.
Exercise 5 p.68
Transform the following by the use of the words in italics. The transformations
required are not only as shown in the Examples, that is to say from left to right
and vice versa, but also within either category, for example from though to
much as or even so to yet. (Sentences 23 and 24 are formal.)
68
LINKING .'CONCESSION 5
69
6 Linking: cause, purpose, concession
(alternative)
Examples
CAUSE ALTERNATIVE
2 Personally I think that some sort—> Personally I think that some sort
of discipline is absolutely of discipline is absolutely
necessary so that children won't necessary to stop <to prevent)*
grow into hooligans. children (from) growing into
hooligans.
CONCESSION
5 I must admit they're quite nice —> I must admit they're quite nice
youngsters although they're so youngsters in spite of <despite>
undisciplined. their indiscipline/(their) lack of
discipline/(their) being so
undisciplined.
Explanation
a For cause (1) we can often, when a suitable noun (belief) exists, use the pre-
position because of as a link instead of because etc. (3A). Owing to and on
account of are more formal alternatives. Due to is also used as an alternative
to because of, but incorrectly according to some authorities, who say that it is
equivalent to caused by and that therefore it should be used only in relation to
a preceding noun,† such as lack in the following:
The children's lack of discipline is due to/caused by their mother's
strange beliefs.
On the basis of this argument the use in the following example of due to
would be as incorrect as the use of caused by (which would definitely be
wrong):
The children are completely undisciplined, because of their mother's
strange beliefs.
You have been warned!
* For a note on style marking, see 3. †Or pronoun like this or which.
70
LINKING: CAUSE, PURPOSE, CONCESSION 6
b For purpose (2) we can sometimes avoid a change of grammatical subject and
use of so that (4Ac) by substituting verbs such as stop (prevent) (17De), allow
(enable) (17C), let (17Be), make (17Be), or give (13Af).
c For concession (3), instead of although etc. (5) we can often use in spite of or
the less informal despite with:
i a suitable noun (indiscipline) or pronoun
ii lack of+ noun (discipline) or pronoun
iii the -ing form or gerund (being).
With pronouns like what (8Am) or everything we can use in spite of (despite)
when the use of although etc. would be difficult or impossible:
Georgina refuses to change her habits in spite of what people say.
Notwithstanding is a more formal alternative to despite:
I have to admit that, notwithstanding their lack of discipline,
Georgina's children do have a certain charm.
It is worth noting that notwithstanding is not followed by the -ing form,
presumably for reasons of euphony (that is, because it would sound ugly!) -
Exercise 6 p.71
Transform the following into alternative constructions like those shown
above. Where possible use in spite of/despite in more than one way (see
Example 3).
1 Although Harry McArthur was very well qualified for the job, he didn't
get it.
2 Perhaps he didn't get it because he looks a bit scruffy.
3 No, I think it was because he fails to do justice to himself at interviews.
4 Some people are refused driving licences because they're short-sighted.
5 What can I do so that the examiner will give me my licence?
6 I can no longer read a number plate at the required distance for the test,
although I've tried very hard to take care of my eyes.
7 Helen always Jocks up her favourite chocolates so that no one else will eat
them.
8 Although I'm partial to good chocolates, I wouldn't dream of touching
hers.
9 Because she suspects people like this, she always counts what are left in
the box.
10 They are fitting the plane with extra fuel tanks so that it will have a
greater range.
11 They are doing this so that it will be a better commercial proposition.
12 However, as it will weigh more, it will now need a longer take-off.
13 My cousin Georgina doesn't like where she lives because there's not
enough social life.
71
6 LINKING: CAUSE, PURPOSE, CONCESSION
14 Her husband often comes home early so that she can get out and
about
more.
15 Although he's trying to help her, she continues to grumble about the life
she leads.
16 The flight was postponed because someone telephoned, warning about a
bomb on board.
17 They took the plane out of service so that the security personnel could
search it.
18 Because I was delayed like this, I did not get to my destination on time.
19 We won't get promoted because we haven't any technical qualifications.
20 Ah, but the management is going to rearrange your work programme so
that you can attend training courses.
21 They're establishing these courses so that the staff can have the chance of
becoming better qualified.
22 Exports should do better now, because the currency has just been
devalued.
23 However, business generally is bad, because the economic situation is
basically unstable.
24 We had a most pleasant day in the country, although there was no sun.
25 Willie, although he doesn't look it, is quite a handyman, and took charge
of the barbecue.
72
7 Linking: time
ADVERBS then
finally
immediately
Introductory note: RELATIONSHIPS IN TIME between two events are very often,
particularly in spoken English, expressed loosely with and with or without adverbs
like then (see left-hand Examples below). However, particularly in written and
more formal English, they are also expressed with appropriate time links that give
greater variety and precision (see right-hand Examples). The purpose of this
section is to show how these are used for past* events and how they relate to and
and adverbs. (For a note on style-marking, see 3.)
Examples
and, ADVERBS TIME LINKS
73
7 LINKING: TIME
and then collected her key at the sure no one was waiting for her
reception desk. in the hotel lobby, she collected
her key at the reception
desk. a, b, c
3 She took the key and went up to - —> Taking the key, she went up to
her room. her room. d
4 She opened the door ... and saw - —> On <Upon> opening/ When she
a man lying on the floor! opened the door, she saw a man
lying on the floor! c, e
5 She saw there was blood on his —> As soon as/Immediately she saw
shirt and immediately knew she there was blood on his shirt, she
had to do something. knew she had to do
something. f
6 She phoned reception and told —> She phoned reception, telling
them what had happened. them what had happened. g
7 She was waiting for someone to —> While she was waiting for some-
come up when suddenly the man one to come up, the man sud-
gave a groan. denly gave a groan. h
8 She stood staring at him. He —> While/As she stood staring at
slowly opened his eyes and him, he slowly opened his eyes
stared back. and stared back. j
Explanation 7 p.74
a Examples 1 and 2: The first event is completed before the second begins,
this clear distinction between the two events often being indicated by the use
after and of then. When using time links we can, depending on the relative
importance of the events, either
i emphasise the first event by using before (1), or
ii emphasise the second event by using after or having (2).
If the subject of both verbs in the sentence is the same (she), we normally link
with -ing as shown (before receiving, after making, having made). We should
not do this, however, when the subject changes, because if we did we would
have an unrelated participle (Having waited etc.):
After she (had) waited (not Having waited/After waiting) at the airport
for over an hour, a message came through telling her to go direct to her
hotel.
Grammar would conflict with meaning if we used -ing here, because gram-
matically this would relate to a message but in meaning it would relate to
her.
b When may be used instead of before (1) or after (2):
She had waited at the airport for over an hour when she received a
message.
When she had made sure no one was waiting for her, she collected her
key.
74
LINKING: TIME 7
But note carefully that with when the past perfect tense must be used
where, with before or after, there is a choice of tenses.* This is to make
clear that the first event is completed before the second begins; use of the
past tense (she waited) would indicate that she waited after receiving a
message.
c Once can replace after or when in Example 2 (see b above), because here
someone (she) regards the completion of the first event as a necessary con-
dition for passing on to the second:
Once she had made sure no one was waiting for her, she collected her
key.
But not, in Example 4: 'Once she opened the door, she saw a man lying on
the floor.' Compare 'Once she opened the door, she was able to escape.'
d Example 3: The first event is an introduction to the second, into which it
changes without a break. In this kind of relationship between events, the
subjects of the verbs are normally the same (she), and the appropriate
time link is introductory -ing (Taking).
e Example 4: The first event is not completed before the second begins, but
overlaps it, so that the two events occur partly at the same time. Note that
when is used here with the PAST, not past perfect, tense (compare b above).
Similar use of when may occur with past states or repeated events: 'When
Marilyn was at university she shared a room with a Lebanese girl/When
Marilyn stayed at hotels strange things sometimes happened to her.'
f Example 5: The first event is followed urgently by the second. As with
when (see b, e above), we use the past tense when there is overlapping (5),
but the past perfect tense when the first event is completed before the
second begins:
As soon as she'd phoned reception she returned to the injured man's
side.
g Example 6: The second event takes place only as part of the first event; that
is to say, telling reception what she had seen was part of the act of tele-
phoning. In this relationship as well (see d above), the subjects are
normally the same, and we can use -ing; but now it is in second, not
introductory, position.
h Example 7: The first event is longer than the second, being in progress
(1Bh) when the second occurs. The tense forms are accordingly different
(progressive against simple). Just as or when commonly replaces while if
the first event, although longer than the second, is of short duration:
Just as/When she was picking up the phone, she saw the man move.
Both while and when, like after, before and (up)on, but unlike as, can be
used
* You may come across the following tense use with before: "We got to the airport before the plane had ar-
rived.' The possible reason for this apparently illogical usage is that it echoes the logical tense use of the
corresponding interrogative or negative: 'Had the plane arrived before you got to the airport? - No, we got
there before it had arrived (= It hadn't arrived before we got there).'
75
7 LINKING: TIME
Exercise 7 p. 76
Transform the following by using the time links shown above. Where possible
give alternatives, as in Examples 2 and 4.
1 I paid at the cash desk in the normal way and then left the supermarket.
2 I checked my change outside and found I was a pound short.
3 I checked it again very carefully and went back into the supermarket.
4 Harry was getting into bed the other night when his wife said she heard a
strange noise.
5 He put on his dressing gown and went downstairs.
6 He went into every room and had a good look round, but could see
nothing unusual.
7 Sheila went through her handbag three times and finally found the key to
her flat.
8 She put the key in the lock and found it did not fit very well.
9 She tried again and again to unlock the door. She thought she could hear
voices inside the fiat.
10 She chanced to look up at the door number and realised at once what she
was trying to do.
11 I touched the handle of the fridge and got an electric shock.
12 I called out to my husband in the garage and told him what had happened.
13 He heard me and came into the house straight away.
14 He made sure all the current was switched off and then carefully checked
the wiring.
76
LINKING: TIME 7
77
8 Linking: relatives
Examples 8A p.78
1-4 are formal. LINKS AND CLAUSE TYPES:
78
LINKING: RELATIVES 8A
Explanation 8A p.79
a NON-DEFINING CLAUSES (1) differ from defining clauses in that they
i follow words (Sir James Blenkinsop, Blenkinsop Hall) of precise meaning
which need no further definition;
ii are additions to a sentence, which makes complete sense without them:
'Sir James Blenkinsop ... is sometimes advised by those of his fellow MPs
who are socialists to give up Blenkinsop Hall ... and choose a dwelling that
would create a less aristocratic image';
iii cannot be used with that;
iv are between commas or a comma and a full stop;
v are spoken after a pause and with a tone change;
vi are less common in informal than in formal English, which is the style of
Examples 1-4.
b DEFINING CLAUSES (1) differ from non-defining clauses in that they
i follow words (those of his fellow MPs, something) of imprecise or
general meaning which need further definition;
ii are essential parts of a sentence, which makes incomplete sense without
them: 'Sir James Blenkinsop, who is a Radical Member of Parliament, is
79
8A LINKING". RELATIVES
e CLAUSE TYPE AFTER INDEFINITE ARTICLE a(n): When, by our use of a, we say
something general or obvious, such as 'Sir James ... is a man' (2) or 'This is a
fact' (3), the clause that follows limits our general use of a to something
particular, and is defining. When our use of a is not so general but is limited to
something of which there are not so very many, like (4) 'a college of
education', we are free to make the clause that follows defining or non-
defining as we wish, without altering the meaning.
f CLAUSE TYPE AFTER DEFINITE ARTICLE the: When the (2) refers to something of which
there is more than one (we know that there is more than one political party in
the world) the clause that follows tells us which one it is, namely
80
LINKING: RELATIVES SA
'the (one) ... he belongs to', and is defining. However, the (4) may refer to
the only one ('the manor house in the neighbouring village'), and then the
clause that follows is non-defining and with a comma. If we removed the
comma we would imply that there is more than one 'manor house in the
neighbouring village', and that we are referring to the one that has become a
college of education.
g CLAUSE TYPE AFTER STATEMENTS (2): Relative clauses ('which is foolish') may
refer back not to nouns or pronouns but to statements ('People criticise him
without knowing his views'). In this case they are always non-defining
clauses introduced by which.
h THE POSSESSIVE RELATIVE whose (3) is used for people, and corresponds to her,
his or their ('... a considerable attraction to tourists. Their money finds its
way ...'). But it is also used for things, especially when these are a collection
of people like a country, a firm or an office: 'The United Nations
Organisation, whose headquarters are in New York, is ....' Here, of course,
whose corresponds to its: 'Its headquarters are in New York.'
l DEFINING CLAUSES AFTER SUPERLATIVES such as worst (4) are introduced by that
and not by a wh- relative. The same is true after all, everything, nothing: 'All
that glitters is not gold.' When that is the grammatical object (see c above) it
is, of course, often left out: 'All I could see was a blank screen.'
m THE RELATIVE what (5) stands for 'the thing(s) that' and therefore, as it carries
its own noun ('thing'), cannot follow a noun and always introduces a
defining clause. This, unlike the other relative clauses so far considered, may
come at the beginning of a sentence: 'What you say is quite true.'
n THE RELATIVES when AND where (5) can be used in either non-defining or de-
fining clauses. In the latter, the preceding noun may be left out, so that when
and where, like what, can directly follow a verb: 'It's (the time) when I like
to do my shopping/It's (the place) where you get the best value for money.'
Note that who, which and that, unlike what, when and where, cannot carry
their own nouns or pronouns in modern English, as shown by the proverb
'He who laughs last laughs longest (not Who laughs last ...).'
81
SA LINKING: RELATIVES
p That AFTER INTRODUCTORY it (5): In the examples just given (n), it is not in-
troductory but is a pronoun standing for something previously mentioned :
'It (= after six o'clock) is when .. ./It (= a supermarket) is where
Introductory it, on the other hand, does not stand for anything but intro-
duces or reintroduces words that may or may not have been mentioned
before, and in this way gives them emphasis: 'It's then ( = after six
o'clock) ... It's at a supermarket ( = there) ...' When these emphasised words
are adverbials of time or place (2B) like those shown here, they are
followed not by when or where but by that. Although this is not a true
relative, it is always used without commas like relative that.
q Note that when introductory it introduces nouns these, in contrast to ad-
verbials (see p above), are followed by a true relative, which is defining: 'It
was Sir James who first had the idea of opening the gardens of Blenkinsop
Hall to the public.' Compare the use of it as a pronoun with a non-defining
relative in 'Who's that on the phone?' 'It's Sir James, who wants to speak to
you.'
Exercise 8A p.82
Put in the relatives and the commas that are missing from the following.
Where you can, give alternatives, including possible omissions (see
Examples 1-4).
1 Our neighbours include Sir James and Lady Blenkinsop ____ live at Blen-
kinsop Hall ____ stands in grounds ____ are open to the public in
summer.
2 Last Saturday we went to the Blenkinsops' party ____ I met Denis Cham-
bers ____ I decided I didn't like very much.
3 Willie ____ works for that firm of architects ____ I was telling you
about the other day was there too.
4 It was also at the Blenkinsops' party ____ I was introduced to Sheila
____ I'd heard a lot about but had never met before.
5 I told her that ____ I'd heard was nearly all good ____ was true.
6 Sheila is one of the very few teachers ____ I know ____ can control
their classes without ever raising their voices ____ is an ability ____
children appreciate highly.
7 The blond fellow ____ you saw her talking to was Ken ____ I must
have mentioned before in connection with our athletic club.
8 Incidentally, our athletic club ____ present premises are being taken
over by the local council are looking for someone like the
Blenkinsops ____ might have some ground to spare for a running
track.
9 At the stroke of midnight Toby Blenkinsop ____ can always be relied on
at parties to do something bizarre rode a bicycle down the main staircase,
a feat ____ drew loud applause.
10 It was one of those rare occasions ____ Toby's exuberance didn't result
in any damage ____ must have pleased his parents.
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LINKING: RELATIVES »A
11 The time ____ I shall never forget was ____ Toby hung from a chandelier the
chain ____ parted company with the ceiling, precipitating
Toby onto a table ____ broke beneath him.*
12 All ____ happened this time was that he tore his trousers ____ was
hardly ____ you would call a calamity.
13 ____ surprises me most about Helen ____ was also at the party is that
she doesn't seem to worry at all about ____ others may think of her.
14 Marilyn ____ several people at the party asked about is now in the
States doing business for the little firm ____ she's head of.
15 I myself am not going abroad until October ____ the weather is cooler
and ____ it will be easier for me to chase business contracts ____ is the
whole purpose of my trip.
16 The first country on my itinerary is India ____ High Commission in
London has given me a list of those people ____ would be most interested in
my line of business ____ is refrigeration equipment.
17 How lucky you are! India is ____ I've always wanted to go on that
dream holiday ____ I've always been promising myself but ____ I've
never been able to afford.
18 I'm told I could renew my passport ____ is out of date at the nearest
consulate ____ address I could get from the embassy.
19 My grandmother ____ was Hungarian by birth was the youngest of three
sisters ____ might lead you to suppose that she was the last to marry.
20 Actually she was the one ____ got married first ____ is hardly surprising
when you consider her looks ____ dazzled any man ____ came near
her.
21 It is three years ago today ____ I first met my wife and so yesterday
____ I had little to do at the office I left early to buy something ____ I
thought would please her.
22 I bought ____ I wanted and hurried home ____ who should I find† but
the decorators ____ I hadn't expected until the following week. These
men had not only convinced my wife it was I ____ had mistaken the date
but had reduced the apartment to chaos.
23 It was on 6th August 1945 ____ man committed ____ is still his most
destructive single act: he dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima ____ is
estimated to have killed 200,000 people. That ____ fell on Nagasaki three
days later is estimated to have killed some 140,000 people.‡
24 The difference in the casualty figures between the two cities is partly ex-
plained by the nature of the terrain ____ in Nagasaki is hilly and by the
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8B LINKING: RELATIVES
position of the bomb ____ in Nagasaki was three kilometres from the city
centre.
25 The atomic bombs ____ were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki had a
power of twenty kilotons ____ is equal to that of 20,000 tons of TNT,
whereas some of the bombs ____ have been developed since then are said
to have a power as great as forty-five megatons ____ equals that of
45,000,000 tons of TNT.
26 These more powerful bombs ____ are now included in the arsenals of all
countries ____ call themselves nuclear powers are known as hydrogen or
thermonuclear bombs.
27 A hydrogen bomb depends for its operation not only on the process of nuclear
fission or splitting ____ is the basis of the atomic bomb, but on nuclear fusion
____ two nuclei ____ in this case are nuclei of 'heavy' hydrogen come
together to form a larger nucleus.
28 Nuclear fission ____ is the source of energy of atomic power stations results
in the accumulation of harmful residues ____ are difficult to dispose
of, whereas nuclear fusion ____ is the source of energy of the sun has no
such residues.
29 The problem ____ scientists are faced with in trying to harness nuclear
fusion as a peaceful source of energy is that it requires for its operation the
very high temperatures ____ are found in the sun but ____ so far have
been produced artificially only by the nuclear fission ____ provides the
'trigger' mechanism of the hydrogen bomb.
30 Our greatest benefit would come not from our ability to control nuclear fusion
and other processes of nature ____ we seem increasingly able to do
but to control ourselves ____ we seem unable to do as witnessed by
____ occurred at Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.
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LINKING: RELATIVES 8B
Examples
SEPARATE SENTENCES SINGLE SENTENCE
Explanation 8B p.85
a Note the correspondence between the italicised words (PRONOUNS etc.) in the
left-hand Examples with those on the right (RELATIVES).
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8B LINKING. RELATIVES
b You will see (2) that one can write either two of which or of which two to cor-
respond with two of them. Similarly, one could write either most (many, part
etc.) of which/whom or of which/whom most. However, with whose (1), the
first, not the second, word order is normal.
c There are a few prepositions which never follow relatives in the position
referred to in 8Ad but which always precede them. They include during (2)
and some compound prepositions such as according to (3) and as a result of
(see 15 in the following Exercise). Words like among (2) and after (see
Exercise), which are essentially prepositions of place and time, usually have a
position in front of, rather than after, relatives.
d It is possible but not very common in modern English to use relative which as
an adjective, in other words to turn This coincidence (1) into which coin-
cidence. Instead we generally put the noun (a coincidence) into what is called
apposition with what goes before (when Cervantes ... also died) and follow it
with a defining relative as shown.
e When building sentences with relatives it is a good idea, for the sake of
variety, to use that instead of a wh- relative wherever possible. This may be
not only where the relative clause must be defining (1) but also where (3) it
can be defining (see 8Af).
Exercise 8B p.86
By replacing the words in italics with relatives, combine each group of sentences
into one sentence, as shown in the Examples. For the reasons given in 8Ad and in
c above, put all prepositions in front of their relatives. The language of this
exercise is fairly formal.
1 New Zealand consists principally of two islands. The southern is the larger
of these but the northern is the more highly populated. New Zealand is
situated between latitudes 34°S and 47°S.
2 The Maoris were the dominant inhabitants of New Zealand until the end of
the eighteenth century. The country began to be colonised by the British
then. The Maoris resisted them fiercely at times. The Maoris' valour and
physique have been much admired.
3 The Maoris are now a peaceable people. At one time they were divided into
many tribes. These were often at war with each other. The tribal system
scarcely exists among them.
4 The Maoris have a tradition. Their name means 'indigenous'. According to
this tradition they originally came from an island called Hawaiki. Some
people have identified it with Hawaii.
5 I fly to India on the twelfth and leave on the twenty-second. This will give
me nine full days there. I fly to Singapore after that. I plan to spend four
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LINKING: RELATIVES 8B
16 The two best known generals on the Northern side were Grant and Sherman,
while on the Southern side the most famous military leaders were Lee
and Jackson. Grant and Sherman have both had American army tanks
named after them. To the best of my belief, no military equipment has
been named after Lee and Jackson. Since Lee is usually held to be the
greatest of the four, this is rather ironic.
17 The turning point of the American Civil War came in 1863 at Gettysburg.
It went quite well for the South at first. General Lee's troops were defeated
in this battle. And after it Abraham Lincoln made a speech. It is perhaps
the most famous speech in American history.
18 The best known book to come out of the American Civil War is, of course,
'Gone with the Wind'. Its authoress, Margaret Mitchell, was herself
brought up in the South. There she heard first-hand accounts of the
struggle. Many of these she incorporated into her book.
19 Powered flight began with the two Wright brothers. It is perhaps the most
important development of the twentieth century. They first achieved it on
17th December 1903. Then each of them made two short flights in North
Carolina, USA, in the aeroplane 'Kitty Hawk'. This is now in the National
Air Museum, Washington.
20 Their achievement would not have been possible without the work of Otto
Lilienthal. He, a German, designed and flew a series of gliders. He unfor-
tunately met his death in one of them in 1896 while experimenting with a
new form of elevator control.
21 The next stage in the development of the aeroplane took place largely in
France. It was greatly stimulated by the Wrights' achievements. In France
Bleriot made his epoch-making cross-Channel flight in 1909. Governments
were forced after that to take the flying machine seriously.
22 Unlike most of the aeroplanes of the time Bleriot's machine was a mono
plane. Most of the aeroplanes were biplanes. He was the pioneer of the
monoplane type. And this type has since proved itself by driving the bi
plane from the skies.
23 The problem of how to support a single wing was not fully solved until the
1930s. Bleriot had overcome it with wires from a central post. In the 1930s
the use of thin metal or plywood allowed the construction of stronger
wings. These needed no external support. This soon led to the building of
such famous aeroplanes as the Spitfire and the Messerschmidt.
24 Another epoch-making flight took place in 1919. Then two Britons, Alcock
and Whitten-Brown, flew non-stop across the Atlantic from
Newfoundland to Ireland. They landed in a bog there after flying for over
sixteen hours in an open plane of military type. It had been only slightly
modified for the occasion.
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LINKING: RELATIVES 8C
8C Shortened constructions
Introductory note: You will already know (8Ac) that in defining clauses the
object relatives whom, which or that can be left out, making the clause a little
shorter. In this section we see how in most defining clauses not only the
subject relatives who, which or that but also the verb can be left out or
replaced, giving a shorter construction. This can also be done in some non-
defining clauses, but, as shown below, only when there is a special
relationship between the clause and the rest of the sentence. These shortened
constructions follow the same rules regarding commas and tone change as
their parent clauses (8Aa, b).
Examples
DEFINING CLAUSES a NON-DEFINING CLAUSES b
Shortened constructions Shortened constructions
possible impossible
1 The McArthurs live in a house They live in number twenty-
(which has)/with green shutters. two, which has green shutters.
2 They have a large garden (that They spend a lot of time in their
runs)/running right down to a garden, which runs right down
river. to a river.
3 This is an advantage for any This is an advantage for Harry
member of the family (who is) McArthur, who is fond of
fond of fishing. fishing.
4 The boy (who is) in the garden Charles, who is in the garden, is
is Harry's son Charles. Harry's son.
5 The boy (who is) going fishing David, who is going fishing with
with Harry is his nephew Harry, is his nephew.
David.
Shortened constructions Shortened constructions
impossible possible
6 David, (who had)/with a look of
expectancy on his face, stood
fishing on the river bank.
7 People who fish have little time David, (who was) fishing a little
for other hobbies. way upstream from Harry,
caught nothing at first.
8 Those who know Harry soon Then Harry, (who knew)/
find out how keen he is on knowing how disappointed
fishing. David was, gave him some
special bait.
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8C LINKING: RELATIVES
Explanation 8C p.90
a DEFINING CLAUSES beginning with the subject relatives who, which or that can
be shortened by the use of (1) with or (2) -ing (present participle), or (3-5)
by omitting the relative + verb to be, except when:
i they refer to a repeated action, a habit, or a hobby (7);
ii they contain verbs that describe mental states, and which are therefore
without progressive forms (1Bs), such as know (8), believe or like
(compare 'Anyone thinking of calling on Harry had better not choose a
weekend');*
iii they contain (9) the verb to be + noun (a keen fisherman), although such
clauses can often be shortened by rewording as shown;
iv they refer (10) to an event completed before what is described in the
rest of the sentence (compare 'The boy who fished alongside Harry
caught a sizeable fish –>The boy fishing alongside Harry ...').
b NON-DEFINING CLAUSES can not be shortened (1-5) except when:
i they refer to SOMETHING HAPPENING AT THE SAME TIME as what
happens in the rest of the sentence (6, 7);
ii they refer to the CAUSE (3Ab) of what happens in the rest of the sentence
(8);
iii they provide INFORMATION THAT RELATES CLOSELY to the rest of the sentence
(9). The shortened construction is commonly in the form of a noun
phrase (a keen fisherman) placed in apposition (8Bd) to the subject
(Harry), but may begin with an adjective or verb participle: 'Harry,
married and with three children, is a keen family man despite his
passion for fishing.'
The test for (i) and (ii) is to see whether the shortened construction can be
put elsewhere in the sentence, usually at the beginning but sometimes at the
end: 'David stood fishing on the river bank, (with) a look of expectancy on
his face/Fishing a little way upstream from Harry, David caught nothing at
first/Then, knowing how disappointed David was, Harry gave him some
special bait.' (Compare the clauses in 1-5, none of which could be moved if
they were shortened.) The same test can be applied to (iii) when the phrase
refers to the subject (Harry): 'A keen fisherman, Harry likes . . ./Married
and with three children, Harry is . . . .' Such phrases can, however, refer to
the
* Verbs expressing desire such as want or wish. although not often occurring in the progressive form,
may be used in a shortened construction after words of indefinite reference: 'People/Those/Anyone
wishing to call on Harry ....'
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LINKING: RELATIVES 8C
object (three children) in a sentence, and then they cannot be moved: Harry
has three children, Christine being (= of whom Christine is) the eldest,
Charles the youngest.
Exercise 1 8C p.90
In some of the following sentences shortened constructions of the type shown in
the Examples can be used, while in others they cannot. Read out or rewrite the
sentences accordingly.
1 Marilyn has lost a purse that contained fifty pounds and a return air
ticket.
2 Anyone who finds it should ring this number.
3 The loss was rather a shock to Marilyn, who was planning to fly to Chicago
next week.
4 Marilyn, who is smiling all over her face, has just walked into the room
waving her purse.
5 Is there anyone here who understands Japanese?
6 Willie, who is a young architect, has just got his first client.
7 His client, who is a Japanese, cannot speak much English.
8 Willie, who is anxious not to lose his client, is looking for an interpreter.
9 Lady Blenkinsop, who is a woman of considerable enterprise, is taking up
farming.
10 She's taking over from one of the tenants on the estate, who farms about
forty hectares.
11 Now Lady Blenkinsop, who is full of enthusiasm for her new life, gets up
at five every morning to milk the cows.
12 I tell those friends of mine who have sedentary jobs that they should take
regular exercise.
13 After all, bank employees, who have sedentary jobs, are often first-rate
athletes.
14 Anyone who buys a second-hand car should be on his or her guard.
15 A friend of mine who knows a lot about the used car trade has opened my
eyes to some of its tricks.
16 Several young mothers, who all had babies in their arms, waited patiently
at the clinic.
17 There are many people who are just not patient enough to wait like that to
see a doctor.
18 Anyone who is thinking of taking the exam should give his name to me.
19 But I hope there's no one who thinks it'll be an easy exam.
20 Isn't that the girl who's always saying she wants to be an actress?
21 No, that's Zena, who is a fashion model and has a pet alligator.
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8C LINKING: RELATIVES
Exercise 2 8C p.92
Here we repeat some of the sentences in 8A, B, since in each of them one or
more of the relative clauses can be shortened. Rewrite the sentences
accordingly.
1 Our neighbours include Sir James and Lady Blenkinsop ____ live at
Blenkinsop Hall ____ stands in grounds ____ are open to the public in
summer.
2 Sir James ____ is a Radical Member of Parliament is sometimes advised
by those of his fellow MPs ____ are socialists to give up Blenkinsop Hall
____ was left him by his father and live in something ____ would have
a less aristocratic image.
3 Sheila is one of the few teachers ____ is able to control their classes
without ever raising their voices ____ is an ability ____ children
appreciate highly.
4 New Zealand ____ is situated between latitudes 34°S and 47°S consists
principally of two islands of ____ the southern is the larger but the
northern the more highly populated.
*>
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LINKING: RELATIVES 8C
5 The Maoris ____ at one time were divided into many tribes ____ were
often at war with each other are now a peaceable people among ____ the
tribal system scarcely exists.
6 The atomic bombs ____ were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki had a
power of twenty kilotons ____ is equal to that of 20,000 tons of TNT,
whereas some of the bombs ____ have been developed since then are said
to have a power as great as forty-five megatons ____ is equal to that of
45,000,000 tons of TNT.
7 These more powerful bombs ____ are now included in the arsenals of all
countries ____ call themselves nuclear powers are known as hydrogen or
thermonuclear bombs.
8 A hydrogen bomb depends for its operation not only on the process of
nuclear fission or splitting ____ is the basis of the atomic bomb but on
nuclear fusion ____ two nuclei ____ in this case are nuclei of 'heavy'
hydrogen come together to form a larger nucleus.
9 Nuclear fission ____ is the source of energy of atomic power stations
results in the accumulation of harmful residues ____ are difficult to
dispose of, whereas nuclear fusion ____ is the source of energy of the sun
has no such residues.
10 The problem ____ scientists are faced with in trying to harness nuclear
fusion as a peaceful source of energy is that it requires for its operation the
high temperatures ____ are found in the sun but ____ so far have been
produced artificially only by the nuclear fission ____ provides the
'trigger' mechanism of the hydrogen bomb.
93
9 Linking: similarity and comparison:
review of as, like, than etc.
Examples 9 p.94
'When I worked (1) as a
waiter, I worked (2) like a as AGAINST like a
slave. It was (3) like working in
a shop, (4) as/(like) you said it
would be. In a restaurant,
(5)as/(like) in a shop, you're at as AGAINST like b
the mercy of both boss and
customers. Although I worked
(6) as hard as the other
as... as c, d
waiters (did), I did
(7) not get as/so many tips (as not
as/so ... as c, d
they did/them).' UNCOMPLETED COMPARISONS j
'If you did (8) the same job as the same ... as c, d
they did/them but got (9) less than AFTER COMPARATIVES e
money (than they did/them), UNCOMPLETED COMPARISONS j
why didn't you leave (10) sooner than AFTER COMPARATIVES e
(than you did)? After all, UNCOMPLETED COMPARISONS j
(11) the harder you work, the the WITH PAIRED COMPARATIVES f
more you should earn.'
'I(12) prefer working to doing prefer AGAINST would rather g
nothing, and (13) I'd rather be a
waiter than (be) a shop
worker. It may be (14) as tiring as... as c
a job but it's (15) not such a not such (a) ... as h
(great) strain on one's patience
(as working in a shop).' UNCOMPLETED COMPARISONS j
There are (16) other things you USES OF than k
could do besides/apart from
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LINKING: SIMILARITY AND COMPARISON 9
working in a restaurant or
shop.'
'What could I do (17) except /but USES OF than k
<other than> cook? And (18) I'd would as soon ... as c
(just) as soon be a waiter as (be)
a cook. There's little difference
between them (19) except in USES OF than k
their wages.'
Explanation
a As AGAINST like WITH NOUNS OR PRONOUNS: as indicates someone's or
something's ROLE or FUNCTION (1); like is for similarity only (2). Compare
also 'He waved the stick about like a sword' with 'He used the stick as a
lever to open the door.' With -ing (verb-noun or gerund), only like is used
(3).
b As AGAINST like WITH CLAUSES AND PHRASES: except with nouns, pronouns and
-ing (see a above), the standard link for similarity is as (4, 5), and you are
advised to use it, at least in written English. Write 'You should do as I do'
not 'You should do like I do.' Although the use of like, shown in the
Examples in brackets, is quite common for clauses and phrases, it is
considered wrong by many people.
c As ... as, the same ... as are links for equality, used with adjectives or
adverbs (6) and nouns (8) respectively; for inequality we use not as/so ...
as (7). Note the use of as ... as with adjective + singular countable noun in
Example 14 (compare 3Ad) and of would as soon ... as with a verb in
Example 18. Here is an example involving two different verbs: 'I'd as soon
stay in this evening as go to the cinema.'
d 'As ... as' + CLAUSE OR (PRO)NOUN: after final as (6, 7, 8) we can use a clause
(the other waiters did/they did) or a noun or object pronoun (the other
waiters /them). But we must avoid ambiguity or double meaning: instead of
writing 'He's as fond of the dog as Georgina' we should make our meaning
clear by writing either (i) 'He's as fond of the dog as Georgina is' or (ii)
'He's as fond of the dog as (he is) of Georgina.' In spoken English, a
difference in stress can make the distinction clear: (i) 'He's as fond of the
dog as Georgina' or (ii) 'He's as fond of the dog as Georgina' (compare
2Bk, m).
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9 LINKING: SIMILARITY AND COMPARISON
e Than AFTER COMPARATIVES like less (9) or sooner (10) can also (see d above) be
followed either by a clause (they did/you did) or a noun or object pronoun
(them). Again, we must avoid ambiguity by writing either 'He likes the dog
more than Georgina does' or 'He likes the dog more than he likes/does
Georgina.'
f The WITH PAIRED COMPARATIVES (11): this is not the common, everyday definite
article, but a link word. Note a similar use of the in contexts like the following:
'What big teeth you have, grandmother!' said Little Red Riding Hood. 'All the
better to eat you with!' said the Wolf.
g Prefer AGAINST would rather: when comparing what we like doing we generally
use (12)prefer + -ing + to (preposition); when comparing what we would like
to do we generally use (13) would rather (sometimes would sooner) + plain
infinitive + than (17Bg). This is because would prefer, like would like, is
followed by the full infinitive with to (10Cb), which means that, although we
can say 'I'd prefer to be a waiter', we cannot complete a comparison with
would prefer in good English: not 'I'd prefer to be a waiter to/(rather) than a
shop worker.' (See k below.)
h Not such ... as is used instead of not as/so ... as with uncountable or plural
nouns ('It's not such hard work/They're not such hard exercises as I thought'). It
is also used with a singular countable noun (15), but not as/so great a strain or
not as/so much of a strain is a possible alternative here. Not such a ... (as) can
be transformed as follows: 'It's not such a strain (as
working in a shop) –> It's less of a strain (than working in a shop) –>
Working in a shop is more of a strain (than being a waiter).' (Compare
3Ad, 3Bb.)
j UNCOMPLETED COMPARISONS after as (7, 14), comparatives (9, 10) or such (15) are
common where the context is established, that is to say, when we know what
we are talking about.
k THE USES OF than are as follows:
i after comparative adjectives or adverbs (see e);
ii after rather (see g);
iii after other (17), although, when words come in between, than is much less
common than besides or apart from (16). The phrase other than is itself
less frequent than except (17, 19). But (17) in its meaning of except is also
used in front of nouns or plain infinitives (cook), and is common in the
phrase nothing but: 'He does nothing but complain about his job.'
You are advised not to use than after any other words besides those in i, ii and
iii above, whatever you may see or hear. Its use, for example, after prefer (see g
above) or after different (20) in place of from or the less accepted to is quite
common, but there are people on both sides of the Atlantic who regard such use
as an 'abominable pestilence' (to quote from H. L. Mencken's classic book The
American Language). So beware!
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LINKING : SIMILARITY AND COMPARISON 9
l COMPARISON BY CONTRAST (21) may be linked with whereas or while or, more
informally, with but. Only whereas can introduce the contrast: 'Whereas a
waiter is at the customers' beck and call, a cook....' The adverbial (2B) that
corresponds to these links for contrast is on the other hand: 'A cook can keep
the customers at a distance. A waiter, on the other hand, is at their beck and
call.' The adverbial on the contrary also expresses contrast but in a different
manner, namely in the form of opposites: 'Helen wasn't angry at your remarks;
on the contrary, she was delighted that you took some notice of her.' Neither
whereas nor while can replace this adverbial. But can replace it only if the
subject (Helen/she) is not repeated. Often the second verb is left out as well:
'Helen wasn't angry at your remarks, but (was) delighted that you took some
notice of her (not but she was delighted ...).'
m See also as if (1Fc) as a link for similarity.
Exercise 1 9 p.97
Replace each number by the appropriate link.
This year hasn't been a bit (1) last year. The summer hasn't been nearly (2)
warm, and our harvest is likely to be smaller (3) it's ever been. (4) this time last
year we were cutting the corn, this year it's still green. However, other (5) give
up farming altogether there's nothing we can do about it.
One of the difficulties of English is that it is not spelt (6) it is pronounced. Some
letters, (7) in though or know, might just (8) well not be there. Another slight
difficulty is that American spelling is different (9) some respects (10) British.
Since it is a little nearer to English pronunciation, one could prefer it (11) British
spelling.
Marilyn seems to regard me not (12) an adult (13) (14) a child. She doesn't talk to
me in the same way (15) she does to the rest of us who work with her, although I
have a university degree (16) them and am (17) good with figures. Perhaps she
treats me (18) this because I'm younger and not (19) experienced in business. But
there's no real difference between us (20) our ages.
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9 LINKING: SIMILARITY AND COMPARISON
'But you'll draw all (30) more attention to yourself by not going in fancy
dress!'
Sheila and Helen are very different (31) appearance. Helen's tall and willowy
(32) Sheila's on the plump side and hasn't (33) a good figure. Helen's dark and
green-eyed (34) Sheila's fair and blue-eyed. Sheila looks pleasant rather (35)
pretty, (36) Helen looks (37) a film star. In short, Sheila's no beauty, but I'd
prefer her (38) a friend (39) Helen. (40) my mother says, there's more to life (41)
appearances, and in character Sheila stands head and shoulders above Helen.
Crossing the rope bridge over the ravine was more (42) climbing (43) walking.
There were other people on it (44) myself, and they made it bob about (45) a
clothesline. The leader went over (46) a man crossing the street, (47) all I could
do (48) last in the queue was to hold on (49) grim death and inch my way across
(50) a spider.
'Why don't you and your husband emigrate to the States (51) us? Wouldn't
you rather live there (52) in Britain?'
'No, I don't think so. I prefer smaller countries (53) larger ones. For one thing,
I wouldn't want to be any further from the sea (54) I am.'
'I'd (55) soon live near mountains (56) the sea. But California's got both, (57)
the rest of the West Coast. That's where we hope to be in three months'
time. (58) sooner (59) better (60) far (61) I'm concerned.'
'Really? Well, I can see there's no more point in my trying to persuade you to
stay (62) in your trying to persuade me to go. We might (63) well save our
breaths. I'd only add that I don't think it's (64) important where you live
(65) how you live.'
Exercise 2 9 p.98
Re-form the following using a comparative and than, in the way shown in the
examples below. If you can, do the Exercise orally, without the book and with
someone saying the sentences to you.
He's not so tall as she is. —> She's taller than he is.
Her car's not nearly so economical —> My car's much more economical
as mine. than hers.
The play isn't such a flop as / —> I thought the play would be more of
thought it would be. a flop than it is.
Exercise 3 9 p.99
Re-form the following using a negative followed by as/so ... as or such ... as, in
the way shown in the examples below. If you can, do the Exercise orally, without
the book and with someone saying the sentences to you.
My car's much more economical —> Her car's not nearly as/so
than hers. economical as mine.
I thought the play would be more --------» The play isn't such a flop as I
of a flop than it is. thought it would be.
1 Our grandparents worked harder than we do.
2 We have a higher standard of living than they have.
3 They live further from the town than we do.
4 They have less money than we have.
5 We have more confidence in the future than they have.
6 Young people are a lot more active than old people.
7 We have fewer responsibilities than they have.
8 Children are more of a responsibility than pets.
9 Dogs are more of a nuisance than cats.
10 They used to greet us in a more friendly way than they do.
I1 We see them more often than we used to.*
12 They speak the language better than we do.
13 German has a more complicated grammar than English.
14 She has less self-confidence than I expected.
15 He smokes more than he used to.*
16 We eat more than we should.
17 We behaved worse in our youth than the present generation does.
18 The house is better furnished than I thought it would be.
19 This is a better table than ours.
20 Inflation was a lot worse last year than this.
<)')
10 The infinitive and –ing
100
THE INFINITIVE AND-ING 10A
101
10A THE INFINITIVE AND-fNG
Before she went to Paris, Zena said she needed (1 brush up) her French, so I
gave her a few lessons. 'Why not (2 stay) for a few days after your work is
over and (3 practise) the language?' I suggested.
On her return Zena was made (4 open) all her bags at the customs. They must
have been very suspicious of her, for they finally made her (5 turn) out all her
pockets. It hardly helped matters when she said in a loud voice: 'How dare
you (6 suspect) me of smuggling?'
She then turned to me, who happened (7 travel) with her, and said: 'How can
you stand there and Jet me (8 accuse) of something you know I haven't done?'
Although I knew Zena was innocent of smuggling, I dared not (9 interfere),
as I didn't want my bags (10 search) like hers.
Things appear (11 go) from bad to worse on the stock market at the moment,
but I think I'd still rather (12 be) a stockbroker than anything else. As the
firm's senior partner, though, I do expect (13 tell) about things as soon as they
happen. It would have been easy for my colleague (14 pick) up the phone and
(15 give) me the necessary information, but he just couldn't be bothered.
'I don't want there (16 be) any secrets between us when we're married,' said
Denis to Helen. 'We'd better not (17 have) any before we're married either,'
replied Helen ominously. Later Helen let (18 fall) a remark that suggested her
engagement to Denis might soon be off. 'Why (19 get) married at all ?' I
heard her say, before her voice was drowned in the general conversation.
Ken's a versatile athlete; I've known him (20 compete) in four events at a
102
THE INFINITIVE AND-INC 10B
sports meeting and (21 win) two of them. It's a pity Willie can't find more
time for sport; he seems always (22 work).
When I called on the McArthurs, Harry chanced (23 garden) for once, not (24
fish), and so I was able to have a chat with him. He and Mary seem (25 have) a
very happy marriage so far, don't they? But their son Charles played rather a
nasty trick on them the other day, when he pretended (26 injure) in a cycle
accident that had never taken place. When he told them the truth he made matters
worse by saying they'd been stupid (27 believe) his story. His mother was so
upset by his behaviour that she wants his pocket-money (28 stop) for six months.
Can you help me (29 find) better accommodation and a more understanding
boss? When he came back from a business meeting this afternoon he expected
me (30 type) all the letters he had given me and (31 have) them ready for him to
sign. I was quick (32 let) him (33 know) I'd had other things (34 do) besides
typing his letters. I hope soon (35 work) in a new job and (36 live) in a flat of my
own.
103
10B THE INFINITIVE AND-ING
Explanation
a The gerund or verb-noun can be a grammatical subject in a sentence (1), either
by standing alone (Winning) or heading a phrase (breaking the local club
records). For emphasis, the gerund may be introduced by it or by what:
It's breaking the local club records that really matters to me.
What really matters to me is breaking the local club records.
(Compare the infinitive as subject, 10Ac.)
b The gerund may be a grammatical object (2) like keeping or running, after:
i any preposition (at), including those of prepositional phrasal verbs like
set about, get out of (17Gii)
ii verbs such as include (2), which are listed in 17D.
c The gerund also occurs after a few phrases like it's no use (3), also listed in
17D.
d The gerund, instead of directly following a preposition, a verb or a phrase, may
(3) have before it an object pronoun (him) or possessive (his) to indicate a
change of reference from the subject (I) to someone else (him). This
construction is the equivalent of an object + infinitive (10Ab), as the following
may help to show:
I dislike doing it and so GERUND
I don't want to do it. INFINITIVE
I dislike him/his doing it and so PRONOUN/POSSESSIVE + GERUND
I don't want him to do it. OBJECT + INFINITIVE
Where (3) the reference to the subject of the sentence (I) is clear, there is no
point in using the pronoun/possessive (me/my) before the gerund except for
emphasis: 'I dislike him doing it but it's no use my trying to stop him. Perhaps
you could have a go.'
e The gerund may (4) be preceded by a noun instead of a pronoun. The
possessive of nouns, corresponding with his, my (3), is rarely used: not in 4
'the President's being shot.' It is only at the beginning of sentences that it may
be preferred to the corresponding noun, but both are usually avoided : The
President's/(President) mixing with the crowd was obviously
dangerous –> It was obviously dangerous for the President to mix
with the crowd as he did.
(Without the last three words it would not be absolutely clear that the
President did mix with the crowd: 'It was obviously dangerous for the
President to mix with the crowd, and so he didn't.')
f With one or two verbs such as prevent (4), the use of a preposition (from)
104
THE INFINITIVE AND-ING 10B
105
10B THE INFINITIVE AND -ING
10 Pardon (mention) it, but could I have the ten pounds back that I lent you
last month?
11 I grudge (lend) money to people who are less than meticulous about (pay)
it back.
12 (Be) my boss doesn't excuse (treat) me the way you do.
13 In fact I'm not going to stand (treat) like a slave any longer.
14 Pressure of work prevented (take) my usual summer holiday this year.
15 Now I'm very much looking forward to (go) to Italy in the autumn.
16 I can't foresee anything (happen) to stop (go) there.
17 Willie's contemplating (learn) Russian with a view to (read) Tolstoy in the
original.
18 (Learn) Russian does, of course, entail (learn) a new alphabet, but that's the
least of one's difficulties.
19 I escaped (have) to go into the army when I was young because the
Government abolished conscription.
20 As I'm nearly forty I don't anticipate ever (call up) now.
21 Robert admits (have) too much to eat when he broke the chair he sat on.
22 I don't recollect (apologise), which he certainly should have done.
23 Charles's sister's in the garden practising (stand) on one leg, as she's got
the part of a stork in her college pageant.
24 I can't bear (stand) there all by herself looking so sad and lonely.
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THE INFINITIVE AND-ING 10B
Without altering the meaning, reword the following sentences by using the words
in italics either with the -ing form (gerund) or with the full infinitive/object + full
infinitive, as shown in the examples above. Do not change the italicised words in
any way.
107
•
10B THE INFINITIVE AND-ING
22 the last... the first Denis usually arrives last in the office in the
morning, but seldom leaves first in the evening.
23 surprised I hear the boss thinks quite highly of him,
which surprises me.
24 / dare I bet you'd never tell Denis to his face what you
really think of him!
25 he's certain I'm sure he'll ask you your opinion of Helen.
26 rely on Yes, you can always be sure Denis will ask
awkward questions!
27 can't afford It would be a bad thing if I made an enemy of
Helen.
28 put off I've decided not to go to Tokyo till Monday.
29 involve Leaving tomorrow would mean that I missed
the finals of the Wimbledon tennis tournament.
30 arranged Ken and I are going to meet in London when I
return from Tokyo.
31 considering We think we might hire a boat for a week's
cruise on the Thames.
32 I enjoy Messing about in boats is fun.
33 intend My aim is to get a boat of my own one day.
34 resent I strongly object to paying excessive rents to
profiteering boat-hirers.
35 persuade I'm trying to convince Willie he should come
with us.
36 keep I tell him repeatedly that he needs a holiday.
37 advised His own doctor has told him he should have
one.
38 warned He has told him he should not overwork.
39 recommends My doctor says one should take shorter, more
frequent holidays.
40 be made Someone must make Willie see sense.
41 expect How much longer do you think Marilyn will
stay in the States?
42 plans Her idea is to return next month,.
43 encouraging Her American friends are probably trying to
make her stay longer.
44 resist They're so hospitable that she may find it hard
not to stay a little longer.
45 foresee But I don't think she'll stay there over
Christmas.
46 difficulty Some Americans find her Midlands English
accent difficult to understand.
47 mentioned By the way, she said she'd met Toby the other
day.
48 she happened It so happened she was staying at the same
hotel as he was.
108
THE INFINITIVE AND-/NG 10C
* Note that the infinitive To get is not acting here as subject (10Ac) but is an infinitive of purpose (= 'In
order to get to know ...'). Avoid using it as the subject of necessitate (see 10Ba).
† What does happen depends on circumstances: 'I don't like to disturb her. and so I'll call again later/but I'm
afraid I must.'
109
IOC THE INFINITIVE AND-ING
I love skiing/to ski in the early spring (which I've done/I do).
I prefer staying/to stay in on cold winter evenings (which I do when I
can).
I hate him suffering/to suffer so much pain (which he has done/does).
Note that for comparisons (9g) prefer should be used with -ing, not the
infinitive:
I prefer staying in to going out on cold winter evenings.
Note also that, like hate above, all these verbs may be used with an object +
infinitive. In this construction the infinitive to be is often omitted before a past
participle, an adjective or an adverbial, as it is with wish or want (10Af):
I'd like my steak (to be) well done, please.
I know you prefer yours (to be) nearly raw.
She'd like us (to be) there by nine o'clock.
I'd hate my hair (to be) as long as that.
c Dread, regret are used respectively with the infinitives to think and to say
(also to tell, to inform etc.), but with the -ing of verbs that describe what
almost certainly will happen (dread) or what has happened (regret):
I dread to think what may happen (and so I'll try not to think about it).
I dread going to the hospital (but I'm going).
I regret to say your husband is seriously ill (= I don't like to say what
I'm going to say, but...).
Do you regret telling her what you did ?
d Begin, start, cease. Usage with begin and start can be shown in the following
example:
It begins to get/getting cold in early October, when the leaves are starting to
turn. It's then that we begin to realise that the year is dying and that we start
getting/to get ready for winter.
As the example shows, begin and start may be used with either the infinitive
or -ing, but there is a tendency to use the infinitive for events that are
impersonal (It begins to get cold) or involuntary (I began to get cold) and -ing
for voluntary actions (we start getting ready). However, both begin and start
are used with the infinitive when:
i they are in the progressive form (are starting) and
ii the verb that follows (to realise) has no progressive form (1Bs).
Cease, which is generally a formal alternative to stop (17Df), is like begin and
start in points i and ii but otherwise usually takes -ing:
i Our firm will shortly be ceasing to produce this particular model.
ii Many people have ceased to believe in the efficacy of the nuclear
deterrent.
iii When shall we cease squabbling and fighting among ourselves?
e Go on, mean, need, try, understand, want are used either with the infinitive or
the gerund according to their meaning, as follows:
110
THE INFINITIVE AND -ING 10C
go on = proceed + INFINITIVE
= continue + -ing
mean = intend + INFINITIVE
= entail + -ing
need = have a need (people) + INFINITIVE
= be in need of (things) + -ing OR PASSIVE
INFINITIVE
try = attempt, endeavour + INFINITIVE
= experiment with + -ing
understand = have the impression + INFINITIVE
= understand why + -ing
want = wish + INFINITIVE
= be in need of + -ing
The following examples should help to make these distinctions clear:
After eating two dozen oysters, Robert went on to consume a huge steak
with chips.
He went on eating long after the others had finished.
He meant to get up early but overslept.
Tell him that getting up earlier will mean going to bed earlier.
We need to be sure we can afford the alterations.
Most of the house will need rebuilding/will need to be rebuilt.
Christine has tried to stop hiccuping for over an hour.
Has she tried drinking salted water?
I understood her to say she didn't like strawberries.
I can't understand anyone not liking them.
Except for the money, who'd want to be a lawyer?
The whole matter of the inheritance wants looking into.
Helen should stop (1 criticise) people behind their backs. Has she, I wonder,
ever stopped (2 think) what people must be saying about her in return?
'If you say I sent Sheila and Ken an invitation to our party I suppose I must have,
but I completely forget (3 do) so.'
'You certainly did, because here it is; you gave it to me to hand on to them, but I
forgot (4 do) so.'
I regret (5 say) that Sheila didn't get the headmistress's post she applied for.
She now regrets (6 apply) for it, because the application took up a lot of her
time.
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10C THE INFINITIVE AND-ING
Although I don't like (7 look after) Zena's alligator while she's away I do so
because I wouldn't like Zena (8 think) I was afraid of it.
The McArthurs' elder daughter simply loves (9 ski), and would clearly love
nothing so much as (10 turn) professional and (11 become) an instructor.
The world's political and social problems have, quite honestly, ceased
(12 interest) me. I ceased (13 try) to put the world in order soon after leaving
university.
'Do you mean (14 tell) me that Willie's firm of architects didn't accept that
wonderful contract with the Town Hall?'
'Yes, I do, because if they had it would have meant (15 give up) an even better
contract in New York.'
It was getting dark and storm clouds were beginning (16 form) when we
eventually arrived at the mountain hut. We'd begun (17 think) we might
have lost our way.
Robert is putting on weight. He says he can't help (18 eat) large meals however
hard he tries. He hopes that the new football season may help him (19 take) off a
few pounds.
You say you've tried (20 stop) (21 snore) but have failed. Have you tried
(22 sleep) on your stomach?
Although I generally prefer (23 be) frank to (24 be) secretive, on this particular
occasion I prefer (25 keep) my opinion of Denis to myself, if you don't mind.
My uncle started (26 smoke) heavily a couple of years ago and now his health is
starting (27 deteriorate).
Lady Blenkinsop says she got my cheque. Well, I remember (28 write) it, but I
don't remember (29 post) it to her.
However good one may think it is (30 get) out into the fresh air at weekends, it's
no good (31 try) (32 convince) Toby of that; he prefers indoor pursuits like
billiards.
'I see that Ken has arrived to play tennis with us. I understood him (33 say)
yesterday that he wouldn't have time for a game today, didn't you?' 'Yes, I did,
but I can understand him (34 change) his mind when he heard Sheila was here.'
1 dread (35 think) what my father's reaction will be when I tell him the news.
That's why I'm dreading (36 go) home tomorrow for the weekend.
I hate him (37 criticise) me the way he does. But I'd hate him (38 think) his
criticism had any effect upon me, and so I keep quiet.
My mother wants me (39 cut) the lawn. I know it wants (40 cut), but I really
haven't time this weekend.
112
THE INFINITIVE AND-ING 10D
You can't say Harry McArthur hasn't tried (41 interest) his son Charles in fishing.
He has even tried (42 give) him a prize for every fish he catches, but all in vain.
You need (43 be) a little more careful in what you say to Sheila's mother. I know
her ideas need (44 modernise), but there it is; she strongly objects to risqué
stories.
If I've forgotten (45 lock) the car it's the last time I'll forget (46 do) so because it's
sure to have been stolen!
After he'd talked about politics for a bit, Sir James went on (47 tell) us about his
experiences in Brazil. I must say this was a relief, because it he'd gone on (48
talk) about politics most of us would have got a bit bored.
I'd have very much liked (49 have) your advice yesterday on a financial
matter, but I didn't like (50 ring) you in case you were busy.
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THE INFINITIVE AND-ING 10D
I'm glad Zena's learning to relax. I saw her yesterday evening quietly (1 read) a
book. All I'd ever seen her (2 do) before was (3 open) one to flip through the
pages.
Marilyn called on her mother the other day and found her (4 lie) on the sofa
scarcely able to move. When they got her to hospital she was found (5 suffer)
from pernicious anaemia.
When there is a bit of home decorating to be done the rest of the family are
enthusiastic to begin with, but usually leave me (6 finish) the job. Once, when
their favourite television programme came on, I was left (7 stand) on the
*For the use here of should, see 11Fa.
115
10D THE INFINITIVE AND-ING
116
11 Auxiliary verbs: particular uses
Introductory note: Auxiliary verbs like will, have, may, should are so called
because they cannot be used alone* but only as an aid or auxiliary to another verb.
A few of them, such as will and have, are auxiliaries for tense (1B), but all except
do are MODAL auxiliaries in that they are used with other verbs to convey a
particular sense or 'mood' like the following:
She'll be there by now. ASSUMPTION
She has to be in the office by eight. OBLIGATION
She may have missed the bus. POSSIBILITY
She should have got up earlier. ADVISABILITY
Auxiliary verbs can form the interrogative or negative without do; and the
negative not, except after may, can be contracted to n't:
Will she be there yet?
Has she (got)/Does she have to be in the office by eight?
She may not have caught the bus.
She shouldn't have overslept.
Most auxiliary verbs combine with the plain infinitive (see 17B), but be, have,
ought and used [ju:st] take a full infinitive. The following is a list of modal
auxiliaries together with the 'moods' they express and the sections in which they
appear:
is to, was to etc. ARRANGEMENTS ETC. 10Dd, 11E
can, could ABILITY, PERMISSION, POSSIBILITY11A
could...! DUTY (WITH REPROACH!) 11E
cannot, could not INABILITY, PROHIBITION,
IMPOSSIBILITY 11A
cannot (have), could not have CONCLUSION 11C
dare 17Ba
have to OBLIGATION (NECESSITY ETC.) 11D
may, might PERMISSION, POSSIBILITY 11A
may (... but) CONCESSION 11B
might...! DUTY (WITH REPROACH !) 11E
must (not) OBLIGATION (COMMAND ETC.) 11D
must (have) CONCLUSION 11C
need... ?† OBLIGATION (WEAK) 11D
need not ABSENCE OF OBLIGATION 11D
* Except where the context is understood: 'Do you think she'll be there by now?' 'Yes, I think she will.'
† Need used affirmatively ('I need to .. ./I need a ...') is a non-auxiliary or main verb (see 10Ce, 17Bf).
117
11A AUXILIARY VERBS
118
AUXILIARY VERBS 11A
119
11A AUXILIARY VERBS
iii One could perhaps ski there even in summer (= It would perhaps be
possible to ski...).
As an extension of iii, could is often used in polite REQUESTS:
Could you (= Would it be possible for you to) give me her address?
g Cannot expresses general IMPOSSIBILITY (4) and could not expresses past
impossibility and impossibility in a context of NON-FACT (see d above) as
follows:
i You can't rely on Scottish weather (= It is impossible to rely ...).
ii I remember how you couldn't rely on Scottish weather (= I remember
how it was impossible to rely ...).
iii You couldn't grow maize up there however much you tried (= It would
be impossible to grow ,..).
As an extension of iii, couldn't can be used in not-so-polite requests
(compare f above):
Couldn't you (= Wouldn't it be possible for you to) give me her
address?
h For past ABILITY which is realised in some actual achievement or success
(compare d above), could is replaced by the past or present perfect tense of be
able (5). Note, therefore, that 'I could borrow Ken's large rucksack for this
trip' can only be supposition about the future as in dii above; it can not be
past fact.
j Past INABILITY, whether or not reference is made to an actual occasion, can be
expressed by couldn't as well as by the past tense of not be able or be unable
(5). However, like could, couldn't cannot replace the present perfect tense: 'I
haven't been able to (not couldn't) do much walking since I broke my leg.'
k See 12Aj for the use of could and might in reported speech.
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AUXILIARY VERBS 11A
1 I remember that if was possible for* our parents to be very strict with us at
times, but that on the whole they were able to control us through kindness
and laughter.
2 We certainly weren't allowed to do exactly what we wanted like Georgina's
children. Are your children allowed to do exactly what they want?
3 It's possible that mankind will have no future if it's unable to mend its
ways.
4 It's possible that what they said wasn't true, but it wasn't possible for us to
ignore it.
5 Would you allow me to use your phone for a moment? It's possible that I left
my keys at home, and I'd like to ring and ask my wife about them.
6 It would be quite impossible for me to pay back what I owe you by
Saturday. Wouldn't it be possible for you to let me have a little more time?
7 Did you hear that noise? I think it's possible that the clock has fallen off the
wall in the room next door. Would it be possible for you to go and see?
8 I'm unable to go myself because I'm unable to leave the baby.
9 Mary and Harry McArthur have at last been able to do what they have
always wanted to do: visit Australia. Unfortunately it wasn't possible for
Christine to go with them.
10 I'm usually unable to get a seat on the bus in the morning and have to
stand, but I was able to get one this morning.
11 When my grandfather was a young man it was possible to park your car
almost anywhere you liked without difficulty. But it's impossible to do that
now.
12 7t's possible to spend hours looking for a parking place. The other day,
when I was able to find one after only twenty minutes, I was amazed.
13 'Under no circumstances,' shouted Helen's father, 'will I allow my
daughter to marry Denis Chambers! /'// not let him go around calling
himself her fiancé any longer!'
14 'It's impossible to adopt that sort of attitude/ said Helen's mother. 'You
should know you're unable to stop Denis calling himself whatever he
wants.'
15 ' Would you allow me to make one small suggestion?' she went on.
' Wouldn't it at least be possible for us to show some regard for Helen's
feelings by asking him to supper?'
16 'It's possible after all that he isn't so bad as you think. When you've been
able to form a considered opinion of him, we'// be able to think again.'
17 Later, with her mother's help, Helen was able to convince her father that it
would be possible for them to ask Denis to supper without precipitating a
marriage.
18 'All right,' he said,'/'// allow you to ask him to supper just so that I'll be
able to confirm my low opinion of him.'
19 It would be impossible to criticise Denis's behaviour on that first evening
with Helen's father. Denis turned on the charm - and he's certainly able to
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11B AUXILIARY VERBS
turn it on when he wants to – and by the end of the evening he was able to
say to himself: 'I've made a hit!'
20 It's possible to fool all the people some of the time and some of the people all
the time, but it's impossible to fool all the people all of the time.
(Abraham Lincoln in this, his famous saying, used you, not one.)
122
AUXILIARY VERBS 11B
123
11B AUXILIARY VERBS
124
AUXILIARY VERBS 11B
1 As a child, Willie was in the habit of spending a lot of time reading his
father's books, and didn't usually play much with other boys.
2 He learnt to avoid their company because they persistently teased him
about his bookish habits.
3 When people asked him what he was going to be he always smiled and said
nothing.
4 There was a time when he was very shy and never went to parties, but
now he normally accepts most of the invitations that come his way.
5 In fact he often tells people that he kept himself to himself in the past so as
to be able to get on with his studies.
6 Although he kept quiet on the subject, he always knew what he wanted to
be.
7 At one time Denis and Helen's father weren't on speaking terms, but now
they're as thick as thieves.
8 Yes, it's just like Denis to know how to get round the boss!
9 Although he is the boss's future son-in-law, I'm damned if I'm going to run
about for him!
10 Both of you are always criticising Denis in this rather nasty way. Why?
11 Charles, why do you insist on interrupting while I'm speaking to your
father? Why do you refuse to wait till I've finished?
12 Charles refused to admit he was in the wrong. Although he's a nice boy, he
can be very stubborn.
13 I can see that your cat usually lies about doing nothing for most of the day
like ours. Was it more active at one time?
14 Oh yes, at one time she was far more active. You should have seen her as a
kitten, when she never kept still for an instant. But like everything else,
cats insist on growing up, don't they?
15 People never stop leaving their litter about instead of putting it in litter
baskets. There was a time when this picnic site looked quite tidy, but now
it's a disgrace.
16 In the old days there wasn't anything here at all except a clearing in the
forest where a few people were in the habit of coming for this wonderful
view of the mountains.
17 When I told Christine that Robert had put on a lot of weight just before the
start of the football season, she replied: 'That's just like Robert! Although
he pretends to be the healthy sporting type he's actually much more fond
of his food than the rest of us.'
18 I agreed. Robert's one of those pleasant, genial people who habitually sits
in cafes for hours and hours laughing and joking, and getting fatter and
fatter.
19 One might have expected him to go and spoil his chance of getting into the
team.
20 I remember when we were children Robert had a habit of saying with a
125
11C AUXILIARY VERBS
little smile that one day he would be famous. Although he said that, has he
now the will to make it come true?'
126
AUXILIARY VFRBS 11C
her to fail. We would normally say 'I'm afraid he'll fail' or 'I'm afraid she may not
have done very well.' Note that should as a modal auxiliary (see Introductory
note, p. 117) is never contracted to 'd, unlike conditional should (1Dh).
b An ASSUMPTION (3) is based not upon our wishes but upon our knowledge of
people and things – their daily routine, character, qualities – and is therefore
more realistic than expectation. It can consequently be unfavourable:
'Christine didn't do much work for her exams and won't have done very well,
I'm afraid.'
c The assumption in Example 3, based perhaps on our knowledge of Harry's
routine, could be made on any working day, ignoring the fact that Harry might be
ill or taking a day off. Similarly, in b above, we may know Christine and that she
is no exception to the general rule that people have to prepare for examinations to
do well in them; but we may not know that special circumstance did not require
her to work hard for these examinations. Sometimes we make allowance for this
kind of ignorance by qualifying our assumptions with adverbs like probably (4)
or with an if etc. (1C) clause:
His wife'll be at home, though, as long as she hasn't already gone out
shopping.
There is little difference in realism or degree of certainty between a qualified
assumption (4) and the use of should/ought: 'His wife should be at home, though.'
d CONCLUSIONS (5-8) are based on particular experiences and occasions, and therefore,
being more adapted to circumstances than assumptions, are generally more
accurate. We would not normally say (see Example 3) 'It's past eight o'clock and
Harry can't be there'; we would investigate further: 'I've rung, but there's no
answer, so Harry can't be there; he must have left for the office.' Although our
conclusions are sometimes wrong (6) we do not make allowance for this when
using must or can't. On the contrary, if we qualify them at all we do so
confidently with such adverbs as obviously (7).
e Note that can't with the infinitive may express inability, prohibition, impossibility
(11A) or a negative conclusion, but that couldn't with the infinitive expresses
only the first three. To express a conclusion with past reference, either can't or
couldn't is used with a PERFECT infinitive. Compare the following:
She couldn't ring Harry, as the phone was out of order.
INABILITY/IMPOSSIBILITY
She can't have/couldn't have rung Harry, as the phone was out of
order. CONCLUSION
127
11C AUXILIARY VERBS
'My daughter works in Washington. They're five hours behind us over there.
Just now, while we're having our lunch, she (1 go) to work.'
'You've forgotten one thing. It's the fourth of July, Independence Day in the
States. So they (2 not |go) to work over there. They (3 enjoy) a public
holiday.'
'Oh, really? I suppose they taught me that at school, but I (4 forget) it. Look,
there's the postman. I wonder if he has brought anything for me. He certainly
(5 ____ ). There (6 be) at least one letter from my daughter.'
'You (7 be) very excited at the prospect of seeing your daughter again after so
long.'
'Yes I am. And she (8 look forward) to seeing me again too. It's one o'clock, so
her plane (9 take off) already if it's on schedule. Will we be at the airport in
time to meet her?'
'We (10 be) in plenty of time. It's normally only a two-hour run from here by
car.'
'I can't see my daughter among the passengers. She (11 miss) the flight.'
'Let's ask the airline. If she has missed the flight they (12 know).'
'Poor dear! She (13 be) frightfully worried if she has missed it.'
'Your daughter, madam, (14 cancel) her booking, because her name does not
appear on the passenger list.'
128
AUXILIARY VERBS 11D
'We (24 ____ ). We would have seen some lights. Let's ask that man over
there.'
'He (25 not |know). He looks as lost as we are.'
'Do you think Christine (26 get) the results of her exams by now?'
'She (27 ____ ). They don't usually take more than a month to come
through.'
'She (28 be) very disappointed if she hasn't passed.'
'Did you say that girl over there was your cousin Georgina? It (29 be)! She looks
far too young. If it is, then she (30 have) some beauty treatment.'
129
11D AUXILIARY VERBS
* The imperative of a verb is basically similar in form to the plain infinitive (10Aa): 'Stop! Go! Don't
slow down.'
130
AUXILIARY VERBS 11D
auxiliary without do: 'Need you go/Do you need to go?' It may be used in this
way with the perfect infinitive for past reference, but now there is a difference
in meaning between the auxiliary and non-auxiliary forms:
Need you have gone (= Was your journey necessary)?
Did you need to go (or were you able to stay)?
Compare need not have and did not need to in h below.
g To express the ABSENCE OF OBLIGATION in the present (6) or future (7), we can use
the auxiliary needn't or the non-auxiliary don't need to/have to or won't need
to/have to. However, there is a strong tendency to use needn't for the absence
of internal' obligation (that is to say, as a counterpart of must) and don't need
to etc. for the absence of external' obligation (as a counterpart of have to).
h To express absence of obligation in the past, we use didn't need to/have to
when we did not do anything because it was not necessary (8) and needn't
have when we did do something although it was not necessary (9).
j Got is often used with has to/have to and may convey a sense of urgency.
Usually there is contraction (1, 3): 'He's got to get up very early/Now I've got
to get your clothes ready.' Similarly, haven't got to may replace don't need
to/have to (6).
'1(1 lock) my front door when I go out; this is a very honest neighbourhood.'
'You're lucky! We (2 lock) ours! Our neighbourhood is far from honest.'
'Luckily enough I (3 wait) more than a couple of minutes for a bus yesterday.'
'Oh, I (4 worry), then. I imagined you standing there in the freezing cold for half
an hour.'
'You're very fortunate, because in your kind of job you (7 get up) early in the
morning if you don't feel like it. In mine I (8 get up) at six every morning
whether I like it or not.'
'You (9 get up) so early if you lived nearer your job.'
'I realise that. But I (10 pay) more rent.'
131
11E AUXILIARY VERBS
'You (11 turn off) the radio, you know. It wasn't disturbing me.'
'Perhaps not, but it was disturbing me. I (12 finish) this work by five o'clock
or I shall be in trouble.'
'Presumably when you marry Denis you (13 go on) working if you don't want
to.'
'Indeed I (14 ____ )! We're going to be as poor as church mice.'
132
AUXILIARY VERBS 11E
133
11E AUXILIARY VERBS
c We have already seen (10Dd) that is/am etc. to, as well as being used instead
of can or must, is used to express an ARRANGEMENT. The past tense is used in
Example 5 because there was an arrangement which we now realise may not
stand. 'We're to meet at the cinema at half-past seven' implies that the
arrangement does stand. In such contexts, however, the present progressive
tense (1Bm) is more common: 'We're meeting . . . .'
d To express the NON-FULFILMENT of a duty or arrangement we use the
appropriate verb with the perfect infinitive, as shown (6-8).
c If we drop the have with was/were (8) we do not know whether the
arrangement was fulfilled or not (compare Example 5) unless we add the
necessary information: 'We were to meet at the cinema at half-past seven but
they never turned up.' However, even with this information, it is common to
use the perfect infinitive (were to have met) to express non-fulfilment.
f Note that should have/ought to have, in addition to expressing the non-
fulfilment of duty or advisability, may also express, according to context,
(i) EXPECTATION with past reference (11Ca) or (ii) the NON-FULFILMENT of
expectation:
i They should have arrived by now (= I expect they have).
ii They should have arrived by now (but they haven't).
g Similarly, could have, as well as expressing the non-fulfilment of duty (with
reproach!) may also express (i) POSSIBILITY with past reference (11Ae) or (ii)
the NON-FULFILMENT of ability or possibility:
i They could have arrived by now (= perhaps they have).
ii They could have arrived by now (but they haven't).
'I do think Denis and Helen (1 apologise) for not turning up yesterday! We
haven't heard a word from them so far.'
'I quite agree. People (2 not |behave) like that.'
'Sheila (3 go) to Cambridge last Saturday to see her brother. Ken (4 take) her in
his car, but I'm told it was out of order, so they may not have gone.' 'I find that
rather funny, as Ken is always telling people they (5 keep) their cars in good
running order.'
'Ouch! At least you (6 tell) me this handle was red-hot! I nearly dropped the soup
all over the floor.'
134
AUXILIARY VERBS 11E
'You (7 tell) me first you were going to pick it up, and then I would have warned
you.'
'I hear Sir James (8 retire) from his directorship at Amical Assurance next
year.'
'No, he (9 retire), but a majority on the board has persuaded him to stay on.
Personally 1 think he (10 make) way for a younger man.
'Did you know that Sir James (11 speak) at our political meeting, but couldn't
because of a sore throat?'
'Really? You (12 get) his son Toby to speak instead!'
'You (13 not |make) jokes like that about poor Toby. I know he's not very
bright, but then not everyone is born to be a politician.'
I'm surprised Ken lost to Willie at tennis last week. He (14 win). They (15
play) a return match yesterday, but it rained.
It rained solidly the whole day. I do think it (16 stop) for Georgina's cousin's
wedding! There (17 be) a reception in the garden, but of course they had to move
it indoors.
Marilyn (18 return) from the United States at the end of this month, but she may
have decided to prolong her stay. She (19 not |delay) her return much longer,
though, because her business over here in England needs looking after.
'Look at the filthy mess on this picnic site! I really do think people (23 be)
more careful where they throw their litter.'
'I agree. But in such a popular place as this the local council (24 provide) litter
baskets.'
'Zena (25 not\leave) her alligator locked up in the bathroom for three weeks. No
wonder it ate the soap.'
'Actually I (26 feed) it for her while she was away, but she forgot to give me the
keys.'
'Helen (27 at least |invite) us to her party considering we invited her to ours.' 'Of
course. We (28 never(send) her an invitation.'
'There (29 be) a company board meeting yesterday. Was there?' 'Yes,
there was. And I hear there (30 be) another one quite soon.'
135
11F AUXILIARY VERBS
136
AUXILIARY VERBS 11F
1 Do you know what Denis's idea is? It is that we go into business with him
in
the hardware trade. I've told him it's essential for us to know exactly the
extent of our commitment before we make up our minds. It's obviously
better for us to be extremely cautious at this stage than to regret it later.
2 'Our stockbroker recommends that we buy as many Worthright shares as
we can afford.'
'Really? It's odd that he has suddenly changed his mind about them.' 'Why
is it odd? It's only right for a stockbroker to change his mind if the market
itself changes. It seems that you mistrust his motives. I'm sure he intends us
to make money, not lose it.'
3 'I'm sorry there was no one at the airport to meet you. I told Denis it was
essential for him to be there by nine o'clock in case the plane was early.'
'Don't worry. I naturally thought it strange there was no one there to meet
me. But why should you take the blame?'
4 'I really don't see why some people get all the luck and others none at all.
Why, after all, did Helen get the job when it ought to have been Sheila?'
'The simple reason is that Helen's mother insisted on her daughter getting
it. And Helen's mother is a woman of considerable influence.'
137
11F AUXILIARY VERBS
'It makes my blood boil to think that she's able to influence things like that.
I've already suggested to the committee that we change the appointments
procedure at once.'
'I don't see why you are so upset about it. Helen's a very competent girl in her
way. Why shouldn't she be up to the job?'
5 'I'm surprised that the railwaymen have gone on strike over the relatively
small issue of overtime rates.'
'A small issue? Why is it a small issue? They're only suggesting that they be
paid the same rate as people with comparable responsibilities. That you
consider this a small issue astonishes me. I admit it's a pity they have to bring
the matter to a head at a busy time of year like this - but then, after all, why
not? If I'd been in their shoes I'd have done the same.'
6 Sir James was most anxious for the committee to give the matter its urgent
attention and publish its findings. He said in Parliament it was better for the
public to know the truth, however distasteful it might be. That he said this
suggests to me that a political scandal is about to break.
158
12 Reported speech
140
REPORTED SPEECH 12A
'I can't wait for Helen any longer,' said Denis, and drove off.
Denis said he couldn't wait for Helen any longer and drove off.
'I may phone you tomorrow at your office.'
(Reported in the evening at home): She said she might phone me
today at my office, but she didn't.
But when the situation is still unresolved or 'open', that is to say, when
there is still some doubt about its outcome, the change in can(not) and may
is optional:
Denis said he can't/couldn't wait for Helen any longer and that he's
going.
(Reported at the office): She said she may/might phone me here
today.
(For other auxiliaries in reported speech, see 12B.)
k As already mentioned (b,c), backshift is something that occurs after a
reporting verb in the past tense. There is no need for it after a verb in the
present tense (see a):
Marilyn says she's glad she went to the States.
Although you may occasionally come across it in your reading, there is no
need for it either after the present perfect tense:
Ken has often said he's going to give up track sports, but he never
does.
I've just asked the garage when my car will be ready, but they don't
know.
Compare:
Ken said he was going to give up track sports last year but he didn't.
(See 1Bp.)
I asked the garage just now when my car would be ready, but they
didn't know. (See 1Bb, 11Bf.)
l In reported questions (see the last example above) ask: is used with the
same wh- words (interrogative pronouns and adverbs) as those used in
direct questions:
'When will my car be ready?'
But except in very formal English, interrogative whom, unlike relative
whom (8Ac), rarely occurs:
'Who (not Whom/With whom) are you going with and how long are
you staying?'
I asked her who she was going with and how long she was staying.
If a direct question does not begin with a wh- word or how, the
corresponding reported question is introduced by if/whether (1Cd):
'Are you going on business (or for a holiday)?'
I asked her if/whether she was going on business (or for a holiday).
Remember that word order in a direct question (will my car be/are you
going etc.) becomes that of a statement (my car would be/she was going) in
a reported question, for which, of course, no question mark is used. For the
141
12A REPORTED SPEECH
142
REPORTED SPEECH 12A
A spokesman for the environmental group Greenpeace said that fishing with
drift-nets (1 kill) not only fish but also seals, dolphins and sea birds, which (2
not |can) see the plastic-fibre filaments and so (3 swim) into them, (4 become)
entangled, and (5 drown). He pointed out that this type of net (6 can) be up to
55 km. long and 15m. deep, and added that a global ban on its use (7 be)
proposed and discussed at the United Nations the following week. A
fishermen's representative replied that his organisation (8 oppose) any attempt
to prohibit drift-net fishing until scientific research (9 produce) evidence to
show that it (10 be) definitely harmful. 'I suppose,' commented the
Greenpeace spokesman, 'that when the research (11 be) finished all the
marine mammals and sea birds (12 vanish).'
The Mercian insurgents have announced that they (13 capture) Revod. the
country's main port, from the government forces. Their leader General Mot
told journalists that they (14 launch) a new offensive last Friday and (15 take)
the town early on Sunday morning. The government, he said, (16 boast) that
they (17 never |give up) Revod. 'But,' he continued in his excellent English,
'they (18 have). So you (19 can) see now, if you (20 fail) to do so in the past,
that they (21 make) only idle boasts and that their final defeat (22 be) certain.'
General Mot declared a month ago that the capture of Revod (23 be) a great
propaganda coup for the insurgents, and he was right.
At a recent symposium on renewable energy sources. Professor Warner was
asked if wind power (24 can) compete commercially with conventional
sources such as coal and oil. His reply was that if it (25 receive) comparative
financial investment it (26 now |be) just as competitive. But, he said, the
Government (27 so far (in vest) in wind power sums which (28 be) quite
ludicrous in comparison with its investments in coal and oil and, above all, in
nuclear power, which (29 be) shown to be the most expensive energy source
of all. He said, too, that research into wave power (30 not only |be) grossly
underfunded in the past but actually suppressed. 'Did* you know,' he asked,
'that this country (31 be) at one time at the forefront of research in this field,
but that the fruits of this work (32 since |be) reaped by other countries? And
that this (33 happen) because nuclear power (34 be) the altar upon which the
Department of Energy (35 sacrifice) our future welfare?'
Lord Justice Cleaver, in pronouncing judgement at the Court of Appeal, said
that Mrs Rudge, who (36 be) wrongfully accused of shop-lifting five years
before, (37 since |live) with the terrible burden of having to clear her name.
But, he now reminded the Court, Superstore's legal counsel (38 soy) that the
company (39 no longer |insist) that there (40 be) some truth in its allegations
against Mrs Rudge. 'Counsel makes it quite clear,' he went on, 'that Superstore
(41 admit) that a very serious error (42 be) made.' The Judge stressed that the
increase in the libel award to £15,000 (43 be) not to be
* The use of the past tense here is idiomatic; in meaning and in its influence as a reporting verb upon the
following tenses it is the equivalent of 'Do you know . . .?'
143
12A REPORTED SPEECH
taken as setting a standard for such awards, which (44 normally | be) left to
the decision of juries. 'But in this case Mrs Rudge (45 be) entitled to greater
damages than those the jury (46 award) her last year in the High Court.' After
the Appeal Court hearing, Mrs Rudge said she (47 believe) in British justice
again. 'It (48 not |be) the money that (49 really |matter), but the fact that I (50
have) a public apology from Superstore.' She recalled how she (51 be)
arrested by a store detective, searched, and locked in a cell for several hours.
When the case (52 come) to trial in 1987 no evidence (53 be) offered and she
(54 be) acquitted. 'But I (55 live) under a cloud of suspicion until this very
day.'
1 'Are you doing anything this evening?' I asked Willie one day. 'Would
you like to go to a disco?'
2 'You may not believe this,' he replied, 'but I've never been to a disco
in my life, as I'm afraid I just wouldn't be able to stand the noise.'
3 'It's clearly high time you went to one,' I told him. 'I'd take you where
you'd be surprised at the gentle, civilised atmosphere.'
4 'Sounds idyllic,' said Willie, 'but if I go out this evening who's to do all
this work? It's got to be done by tomorrow morning.'
5 'Who are you doing it for?' I asked. 'Can't it wait? I had a lot of work
myself the other day, but I didn't let it spoil my evening, I can tell you.'
6 'If my work spoilt my evenings/ retorted Willie, 'I wouldn't be an
architect. I often have to work in the evenings. Some of my clients don't
like to be kept waiting, you know.'
7 'But I bet your clients take time off,' I said. 'If you did the same how do
you know you wouldn't find a new one? Some very moneyed people go
where I propose taking you.'
8 'Sounds to me more like a night club than a disco. The only one of those
places I ever went to was called the Upper Crust.* I was asked to advise
on some architectural improvements.'
9 'That's the very place I'm talking about!' I cried. 'So now you can come
and see how your ideas have worked out in practice, can't you?
Combine business with pleasure. A perfect evening for you.' (Begin: I
was delighted to tell him ...)
10 'I'm afraid not,' said Willie. 'They didn't like my idea of making it look
* The literal meaning of crust is the outside of a loaf of bread; the upper crust is used figuratively to
mean the privileged or 'superior' section of society.
144
REPORTED SPEECH 12B
She (having just finished playing a piece on the piano): That was a Chopin
Prelude. Difficult but rewarding.
He: Marvellous'. I can never hope to play like that. But it inspires me to
go
on learning. Do you know a good teacher around here who'd give me
lessons?
She: Well, suppose I offered to teach you. What would you say?
He: Oh, if only you would! I'd rather you taught me than anyone else.
She: I'll teach you only if you attend my lessons regularly and practise
hard.
He: Yes, of course. You have such a good reputation as a teacher. But I
didn't ask you because I didn't think you'd have time.
She: Remember, I never teach anyone who's not prepared to practise hard,
no matter who or what they are.
He: Don't worry. I'll practise as if it were a matter of life and death. And I
won't cut your lessons.
She: Good. It's time we started the first lesson, then. Come over to the
piano.
(Begin: Expressing her satisfaction, she ...)
He: Er - well - er - I'd have liked to start now but I'm afraid I can't. I've
got
some important business to attend to. Also, hadn't we better settle the
price first? It would be unbusinesslike if we didn't.
She: Hmm! If you don't mind my saying so I think you're in danger of
starting off on the wrong note. Business may come before pleasure,
but with me it doesn't come before music. You'll have to share that
opinion with me if I'm to invite you to the piano again.
Helen asked Sheila what she'd do if her friend Ken was late
(= 'Sheila,' said Helen, 'what'll you do if your friend Ken is late?').
c Might (11Aa, e) does not change (3). Could or could not does not change when
it is used for possibility (3) or impossibility (11Ae-g).
d Should and ought to do not change (4) whether they are used for
expectation (11Ca) or duty and advisability (11Ea).
e Must used for conclusions (1 ICd) does not change (5).
f Must (not) used weakly with the meaning of should (not) to express
advisability (6) rather than obligation does not change.
g Must (not) and need not, used respectively for obligation (11Da) and absence of
obligation (11Dg), do not always change but very often do so, especially when
what is reported is all in the past, or 'history'. These possible changes are given
in Examples 7-12, where we may suppose that the conversation was reported
when Helen had caught her plane, whereas 'Helen said she must catch her
plane' is likely to carry the idea that she has not yet caught it.
h Since must has no tenses (11Dd), it is its approximate equivalents have to and
will have to that, through backshift (12Ab), can provide the changes in
reported speech (7,8). Must expressing a command (9) has the additional
equivalent of is (etc.) to (11De), which in the negative is a substitute for
mustn't (10). Negatives include, of course, such words as no one or never:
No one must order a taxi.
She said no one was to (not had to) order a taxi.
147
I2B REPORTED SPEECH
j Similarly, need not (11Dg) may be the equivalent of does not need to/have to
or will not need to/have to, which provide the basis for the changes in reported
speech (11, 12).
k Whereas did not need to changes to had not needed to (13), need not have
does not change (14). (If you have forgotten the difference in use and
meaning between these two past forms of need not, see 11Dh.)
l Could (not) often changes when it is the equivalent of the PAST tense meaning
was (not) able to (15), but could (not) does not change when it expresses NON-
FACT and is the equivalent of the conditional would (not) be able to (16) or of
was/were (not) able to (see 11Ad):
'If I couldn't (= wasn't/weren't able to) take you to the airport I
wouldn't tell you I could (= was)' —> He told her that if he couldn't
take her to the airport he wouldn't tell her he could.
m Similarly, could (not) used for permission or prohibition does not change when
it means would (not) be allowed to (11Aa) but may change when it means was
(not) allowed to (11Ab, c):
'At my school we couldn't keep pets' —> He said that at his school
they hadn't been allowed to keep pets.
1 It's sad but we'll have to get rid of Molly if she doesn't mend her ways,'
said Harry McArthur. 'After all, we can't afford to be too soft-hearted
about our typists and secretaries if we're to have an efficient firm.'
2 'I must,' he continued, 'have told her at least three times about using the
office phones. She should listen when I tell her things. She must never
call America without my permission.'
3 'I think she may have done it again/ said Georgina. 'What shall I tell her
if she has?'
4 'You needn't tell her anything/ answered Harry, 'because I'll deal with
the matter myself.'
5 'I couldn't ask Mr McArthur about the phone/ said Molly, 'because he'd
gone out to lunch. So I thought I could use my own discretion in the
matter.'
6 'She must be very stupid to say things like that/ said Georgina. 'Shall I
tell her she's got the sack?'
7 'No one must tell her anything/ insisted Harry. 'Only that she must
come and see me. It looks very much as if she'll have to be told her
services are no longer required/
148
REPORTED SPEECH 12C
Examples
DIRECT SPEECH REPORTED SPEECH
149
12C REPORTED SPEECH
150
REPORTED SPEECH 12C
151
•
I2C REPORTED SPEECH
13 'Oh, yes!' said our neighbour. 'Why not go to the new Chinese restaurant?
'I've heard it's excellent.'
14 'Mind you/ she went on, 'you'll have to reserve a table.'
15 'And you'd better put on a tie,' she said, eyeing me disapprovingly.
16 'Yes,' said my wife, 'go upstairs and change into something decent.'
17 'You're not to come out with me looking like that,' she said.
18 'If I were you,' said our neighbour, 'I'd telephone the restaurant first.'
19 'Hurry up,' said my wife, 'whichever you do first.'
20 I suddenly felt a great need for peace and quiet. 'Look,' I said, 'why don't
you two go out instead of me?'
152
REPORTED SPEECH 12C
20 If you've been to Japan, you'll know that they drive on the left there too.
21 Do you think I'd like your country if I visited it?
22 Tell me the things I should make a point of seeing.
23 I must try and save some money so that I can visit you.
24 I must go now, as I have to correct some homework.
25 You mustn't forget that you have some homework to do for tomorrow.
153
13 The passive
1 They arrested Peter two days —> Peter was arrested two days a
ago. ago.
2 The Mercian press has —> He has been declared a spy a, c, e
declared him (to be) a spy. by the Mercian press.
3 The authorities had clearly —>- It had clearly* been decided a, b, e
decided to make an example by the authorities to make
of him. an example of him.
4 They've announced (that) —> It has been announced (that) a, b
he'll be tried. he'll be tried.
5 They're not complying with —> The law is not being a, d
the law. complied with.
154
*
THE PASSIVE 13A
* Complements can be defined as nouns or adjectives that complete the way a verb is used (that is to say.
the verb pattern) without being that verb's object. In 'He is a spy', spy is a complement, not an object, and of
course this sentence has no corresponding passive.
155
13A THE PASSIVE
With regard to adverbial phrasal verbs (16Aa), those which take an object can
as a general rule be used in the passive:
The police beat Peter up. —> Peter was beaten up (by the police).
(Compare 8Ad.)
e Note that the subject of an active sentence is not represented in the passive
unless it is of some significance (2, 3), when it appears as the agent (by the
Mercian press, by the authorities). Whether there is an agent or not, we think
in the passive more about the person or thing acted upon and about the action
itself than about its source, which becomes remote or impersonal.
156
THE PASSIVE 13A
j The second group (ii) consists of verbs like feed or build, either object of
which can become the subject in a corresponding passive but which, unlike
those of the first group, do require a preposition for object B in the passive.
This preposition (see 17E) is usually for but may be to or into:
They fed the computer all the —> All the available data were
available data/all the available fed into the computer.
data into the computer.
They've built it a special shed/a —> A special shed has been built
special shed for it. for it.
k For verbs of the third group (iii), see q, r, s below.
157
13A THE PASSIVE
158
THE PASSIVE 13A
1 I hadn't been with my firm for more than four months when they taught
me the elements of marketing and made me a sales representative.
2 They recently increased my salary by thirty per cent. The trouble is that at
the same time they reduced my expense allowance by nearly half.
3 Denis says his firm has offered him a job in Singapore, but that he won't
take it because someone else has promised him a much better job in Japan.
4 Someone has lent me a book on computers and I now understand roughly
how they work. No one had ever explained them to me before.
159
13A THE PASSIVE
5 Last year they overtaxed me and now owe me quite a lot of money. I think
that until they refund it to me they should pay me interest on it, don't
you?
6 They should do away with income tax altogether. If necessary, they could
put up value added tax by way of compensation. But unfortunately you
can always rely on this Government not to do the right thing.
7 From the way people are speaking about this Government, one might think
that they will not vote it back into power at the next election. However,
the proverb 'Better the devil you know than the devil you don't' will
probably decide the result in the Government's favour.
8 Over the years people have set up various small, friendly shops in this
town, but they seldom survive long because the supermarkets force their
prices down and drive them out of business. People have suggested that
shop owners should combine in an advertising campaign, but this would
probably lead to the supermarkets beating them yet again, this time in a
propaganda war.
9 Have people ever stolen your washing when you've hung it out to dry ?
They have mine. In fact they've been stealing mine a bit at a time for the
past month.
10 A couple of weeks ago they confiscated Peter's passport. They won't
return it to him now he's been arrested.
11 The latest news is that they've charged him with conspiracy, refused
him bail, and jailed him. They may forbid you any contact with him before
the trial.
12 During the war they used to open our letters and censor them. They told
us, of course, that the censors would never disclose or discuss our personal
affairs.
13 Publishers were always rejecting the pieces 7 wrote, but now I am glad to
say they are beginning to accept them. (Use two auxiliary passives,
beginning /....)
14 I thought they refused children admission to horror films, but the other
day they allowed my twelve-year-old niece in to see that shocker at the
Plaza.
15 Brenda Pearl's father left her a considerable sum of money but crafty
lawyers took quite a lot of it off her.
16 They've endorsed Ken's driving licence again, I'm afraid. The next time
they catch him for speeding they'll probably disqualify him from driving
for a year.
17 My car broke down yesterday and they had to tow it to a local garage for
repair. They'll charge me for the repair, of course, but not for the tow, as
my membership of the Automobile Club covers me for that.
18 Someone once showed me the way to the railway station, but I have now
forgotten it, which is a pity, because people frequently ask me it.
19 People used to drum into me as a child that those were the best days of my
life. (Begin 7... and follow with introductory it.) They told me wrong.
160
THE PASSIVE 13B
20 They awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to Martin Luther King in 1964. In 1968
someone assassinated him.
21 Someone once taught me a Finnish song without telling me what it really
meant. In fact they played a nasty trick on me, because when I sang it in
Finland everyone blushed.
22 They've known for some time that if you feed penicillin to the young of
domestic animals you significantly increase their growth rate.
1 People have known Willie stay up working in his office all night./Willie ...
2 They say Willie's father was a chronic work addict too./Willie's father ...
161
13B THE PASSIVE
162
THE PASSIVE 13B
163
•
14 Inversion of subject and verb
164
INVERSION OF SUBJECT AND VERB 14A
165
14A INVERSION OF SUBJECT AND VERB
* Note that never as a lead word is used in an emphatic, total sense. As a non-emphatic substitute
for not in a sentence like 'We expected to see Willie at the party but he never came' it could not be
used as a lead word.
166
INVERSION OF SUBJECT AND VERB 14A
There is an exception to the last rule when there or here is used with the
verb to be:
Here am I, slaving away, while there are you doing nothing!
LEAD WORDS, TYPE III (Examples 13-15):
l should (13), which, as we have seen (1Db), may be used in certain
conditional sentences, can act as a lead word, eliminating if;
m the subjunctive were (14), which may occur in certain conditional sentences
(1Db), can act as a lead word, eliminating if;
n the auxiliary had (15), which occurs in certain conditional sentences (1DC),
can act as a lead word, eliminating if.
1 The starter's gun went bang and the runners went off at a good pace.
2 They'd scarcely covered the first lap when the leading runner, Roger
Baines by name, slipped and fell.
3 A runner called Plunger was behind him at the time.
4 Although he tried hard, Roger Baines never made up the distance he had
lost.
5 At the start of the last lap he was last; our friend Ken was second from last.
6 The time had come for Ken to make one of his famous sprints, so there we
were, cheering our heads off!
7 The rest of the spectators sat around the track, silent but expectant.
8 We had hardly started cheering when Ken responded: he shot forward,
like a bolt from the blue!
9 I well remember Plunger's look when Ken passed him ten metres from the
tape!
10 I've rarely seen anyone judge his final sprint so well.
I1 The thieves had hardly got round the corner when the engine of their car
stalled.
12 They jumped out and ran off up the street.
13 Just at that moment a couple of police cars drove up.
14 Windows flew open all along the street and a lot of heads popped out to
watch the chase.
15 A church stands at the top of the street; one of the fugitives darted into it.
16 Nothing like this had ever happened in our street before.
17 If I hadn't seen it with my own eyes I wouldn't have believed it.
167
14B INVERSION OF SUBJECT AND VERB
168
INVERSION OF SUBJECT AND VERB 14B
3 All my money had disappeared, ---> Not only had all my money
and my clothes had gone as well. disappeared, but my clothes had
gone (as well).
169
15 Dependent prepositions
Introductory note: The prepositions that are dependent on certain words are,
together with phrasal verbs (16), particularly the problem of the advanced
learner. They form one of the last barriers to mastery of the language, which
is why they receive a lot of attention here. There are altogether 300 words
with their dependent prepositions in this section. How many you know
already you can establish the first time you do the Exercises. Those you do
not know you can learn with the help of study lists 17F, before repeating the
Exercises until you are satisfied with your knowledge.
Exercises 15 p.170
For each number provide a preposition, but before doing so run your eye over
each group of sentences in order to grasp the general meaning and context.
1 15 p.170
Sheila's very strict (1) the children in her class. She's particularly strict
(2) punctuality. However, her relationship (3) the children is a happy one.
We think that Brenda's system of office filing is a great advance (4) the old
system. We should benefit a lot (5) it. Yes, it definitely has a lot of
advantages (6) the old system.
I can't possibly agree (7) your demands. Unless you're prepared to
compromise we'll never be able to agree (8) a sensible way to deal with the
problem of your monthly allowance. Why can't you learn to agree (9) me
sometimes - especially (9) my ideas for your future? They are in your
interest, you know.
Nowadays there's no advantage (10) being a woman. In the old days a clever
woman could take advantage (11) being female. But now the rules of social
conduct apply (12) men and women alike.
Denis is always boasting (13) his success as a salesman. His behaviour is
typical (14) the social upstart. He's quite incapable (15) showing a bit of
modesty.
Things have changed considerably (16) the worse, I am afraid. There has
been a serious deterioration (17) the economic situation. The key (18)
recovery lies in our export trade.
Ken has been charged by the police (19) dangerous driving. He is prepared
170
DEPENDENT PREPOSITIONS 15
to plead guilty (20) driving without due care and attention but says he is not
guilty (21) dangerous driving.
The man confessed (22) stealing food, pleading that his children had been
suffering (23) malnutrition and might well have died (24) starvation.
Many people say nuclear power stations are a potential danger (25) the local
population and have little confidence (26) the so-called safety measures. They
are very concerned (27) what might happen in an emergency.
These revelations have done a lot of damage (28) Sir James's political
reputation. It is difficult to be critical, though, (29) what he did. Everyone is
very curious (30) what he will do next.
2 15 p.171
Marilyn's father is a dealer (1) antiques. He has a great reputation (2) honesty.
He's an expert (3) eighteenth-century porcelain.
Helen was very jealous (4) her sister's popularity. Her sister was very popular
(5) the teachers at school. She impressed them (6) her work and her
personality.
What are this year's figures (7) road accidents? There has been a slight
increase (8) the total number of casualties. But there have been fewer actual
deaths (9) road accidents this year.
The members of the local garrison are confined (10) barracks during the
week. But at the weekends the town swarms (11) soldiers. I am glad to say
that on the whole they make a good impression (12) the inhabitants.
Toby and his father differ a lot (13) their views on life. They have very
different attitudes (14) work. Toby disapproves strongly (15) working any
harder than he feels like working.
We shouldn't discourage Helen (16) being an actress. We'd only prejudice her
(17) us. And it certainly wouldn't cure her (18) stage fever.
I'm very surprised (19) your doing a thing like that. Personally, 1 never
interfere (20) other people's affairs. And so I'm rather disappointed (21) your
behaviour.
'Denis objects strongly (22) being called a nutcase. He absolutely insists (23)
an apology. An apology might be preferable (24) a fight.' 'I never called him a
nutcase; I never even hinted (25) it. Denis is famous (26) his wildly
inaccurate statements. He has apparently fooled you (27) believing one of
them.'
Sheila need have no doubts (28) passing the exam. She can be absolutely
confident (29) success. I have complete faith (30) her ability to pass.
171
15 DEPENDENT PREPOSITIONS
3 15 p.172
Sheila's very good (1) handling children. Yes, she is indeed very good (2)
children. What's the secret of her appeal (3) children?
It's a wonderful opportunity (4) Marilyn. One doesn't often get such a good
opportunity (5) seeing the world. She shouldn't miss the chance (6) a trip like
that.
That TV serial they showed last year was an insult (7) one's intelligence. I had
every intention (8) writing and protesting (9) the producer about it, but never
had the time.
Helen's always fishing (10) compliments. I'm fed up (11) paying her
compliments. Personally I'm not in the habit (12) complimenting people.
There's going to be an improvement (13) the weather. The weather has a great
influence (14) my mood. There's a definite relationship (15) my mood and the
weather.
My new secretary's very pretty but is sadly lacking (16) powers of
concentration. She seems to be unable to concentrate (17) anything for more
than two minutes at a time. I'll clearly have to deal (18) the important matters
myself and leave her to deal (18) the visitors.
Marilyn has been ill in bed for three days (19) influenza. There's little hope (20)
her getting up tomorrow. It all depends (21) what the doctor says.
I am full of admiration (22) Sheila's mother. Her life has been one continual
struggle (23) illness or poverty. But she has never surrendered (24) despair.
Zena feeds her alligator once a week (25) raw eggs and scraps. There's little
likelihood (26) its getting fat on that. Perhaps one day it will avenge itself (27)
its owner.
The War of Independence ended in victory for the USA (28) the British. In 1812
the USA itself declared war (29) Britain. What are your views (30) British
policy at the time?
4 15 p.172
I hear they suspect Denis (1) taking the money. Are you yourself suspicious
(2) Denis? I can't say that I would have trusted him (3) all that cash.
Ken has always said he would make another attempt (4) beating the 400-metre
record, and is in fact making an attempt (5) it today. He has gained enormously
(6) self-confidence, you know.
The country is very poor (7) natural resources. It is trying to become self-
sufficient (8) food. The Government has had finally to decide (9) a definite
agricultural policy.
172
DEPENDENT PREPOSITIONS 15
You seem to be terribly envious (10) your sister's wealth. There's little point
(11) being envious. Money isn't essential (12) happiness.
I'd like to congratulate you (13) your cooking. You've certainly
succeeded (14) turning out a wonderful meal. You'd have no
difficulty (15) finding a first-class job as a chef.
Robert says he's not going to sacrifice his ambitions as a footballer (16) a safe,
conventional career. Future security, he says, is no substitute (17) present
success. He adds that the great thing about football is that it's independent (18)
wealth or social status; anyone can join in.
Ken's gaining (19) us rapidly in his Bangmobile. He has the reputation
(20) being a reckless driver. I'm going to try and prevent him (21)
passing.
Denis has virtually accused me (22) cheating him. He says I cheated him two
hundred pounds in a business deal. I take the strongest exception his
accusation.
Sir James succeeded (25) the hereditary title in 1969. His father died injuries
received in a road accident. Although Sir James takes pride his ancestry, he's
no snob.
Once a year in the British navy the officers wait (28) the seamen at table. This
custom seems to be good (29) discipline, not bad. Is the custom peculiar (30)
the British navy?
5 15 p.173
My wife now usually compliments me (I) my taste (2) clothes. She's very
particular (3) my appearance, which she says is a great improvement (4) what it
was.
Sir James is always very honest (5) his dealings (6) us. He's always very honest
(7) all of us. There's never any question (8) a limit being set (9) what he tells us.
Am I eligible (10) this insurance scheme? Would it insure me fully (11)
illness? I've been told this scheme is superior (12) anything else on the
market. Do you know (13) any better?
What was Sheila so angry (14) yesterday? She was angry (15) Ken (16) keeping
her waiting. She was also angry (17) being told to be more patient in future.
Sheila's sister has grown (18) a lovely girl. For a moment I mistook her (19)
Sheila herself. Then I noticed how she differs (20) Sheila. For one thing, I don't
think that Sheila's sister has grown much (21) wisdom.
Sir James ended his speech (22) rather an extravagant attack (23) the
Government. He said nothing was safe (24) the Government's pernicious
173
15 DEPENDENT PREPOSITIONS
influence. He blamed it (25) all our economic ills. He even seemed to blame
the bad weather (26) it too.
Marilyn has made herself familiar (27) the latest developments (28) computer
technology and has equipped her office (29) all sorts of electronic gadgets. In
fact she has made her office (30) a kind of laboratory.
6 15 p.174
Zena's devoted (1) her pet alligator and says she'd never part (2) it.
Personally I don't know what she sees (3) the creature. It seems to be
concerned only (4) eating and sleeping.
Denis is never very free (5) his own money but he makes free (5) other
people's. The other day he helped himself (6) most of my cigars. I've a good
mind to charge him (7) them.
Willie seldom takes people (8) his confidence, but last week he confided
(9) me. He told me he was keen (10) Sheila.
The snow storm resulted (11) most people being late at work. Sheila excused
her children (12) being late for class that morning. And she excused them (13)
attending afternoon school.
I'm disappointed (14) Sir James. He says he's entering (15) some sort of
political agreement with the Democrats. I'm opposed (16) any deal of that
kind.
Helen said she was now mercifully free (17) Denis. What did she mean (18)
that strange remark? It sounds as if their flirtation has ended (19) a row.
Sir James won the last Parliamentary election (20) only a hundred and
seven votes. He says his party will soon be forced by circumstances (21) an
alliance with the Democrats. He says both parties could profit (22) it.
At one time Helen was thinking (23) becoming a model like Zena. Now she's
interested (24) the stage. In any case she has a taste (25) the bright lights.
Contrary (26) many people's expectations, Lady Blenkinsop's farm is proving
a success. This year she's planting one field (27) maize, and is turning two
more (28) a vineyard. The area for grazing is being reduced (29) half, (30) a
little over twelve hectares.
7 15 p.174
Sir James said we should guard (1) any restrictions (2) our freedom. Yet he
failed to mention that many of us are threatened (3) the loss of our jobs. The
threat (4) unemployment is a threat (5) our freedom.
Sir James's son Toby is certainly living (6) his reputation as a ne'er-do-well.
He lives entirely (7) his wits and (8) credit. They say he's living (9) the day
his father dies.
174
DEPENDENT PREPOSITIONS 15
What she said about Toby was news (10) us. She obviously had a very low
opinion (11) him. I think she should have kept her opinions (12) the subject
herself. There were one or two people there who were highly indignant her
remarks.
We had heard that Lady Blenkinsop had been robbed (15) her jewels. So we
listened (16) news of the robbery on the radio. And we watched (17) it on
television too. But no one mentioned it on either.
You say we're a country rich (18) tradition. Surely that's true (19) most
countries. What's important (20) us is that we should remain true (21) our best
traditions.
I am not convinced (22) the general value of a university education. It is
clearly an advantage (23) some, but its benefits (24) others can be very
limited. What is important is that it should not be restricted (25) those who
can afford it.
Helen is always greedy (26) praise. Mind you, I don't hold this (27) her,
because I'm fully aware (28) the difficulties she has had to face in her life. I
really feel quite friendly and well disposed (29) her. Feelings of animosity are
foreign (30) my nature.
8 15 p.175
Sheila's applying (1) a headmistress's post. She may well get it, since her aunt
has influence (2) the educational authorities. Also Sheila's well qualified (3)
the post in her own right.
The international relief organisations have appealed (4) the public (5) aid (6)
the victims of the earthquake. They hope to provide everyone (7) adequate
shelter by winter. To allow the homeless to remain in tents is to condemn
them (8) death. One naturally has a lot of sympathy (9) the people in their
terrible plight. I shall certainly contribute (10) the fund.
Martyrs are people who suffer (11) their beliefs and sometimes die (12) them.
They are not prepared to bargain (13) their persecutors (14) their lives. Nor do
they expect people to have pity (15) them. There is therefore little danger (16)
the world becoming crowded (17) martyrs.
Some people think that universal, formal education is an obstacle (18) an
individual's full mental development. Others think that without it there is no
hope (19) society's future. No one can afford to be indifferent (20) the
problem.
According to Darwin's Theory of natural selection there is a struggle (21)
survival (22) individuals and (22) species. It seems to me that Homo sapiens
has to struggle mainly (23) his own nature. There are times when his
prospects of survival do not look too good (24) me.
175
15 DEPEN DENT PREPOSITIONS
Sheila's noted (25) her success (26) young children. She cares (27) them as
individuals, not as playthings. They don't have to conform (28) some
preconceived notion of what a child should be. Sheila devotes a lot of her own
time (29) the children at her school, especially (29) those deprived (30) parental
affection.
9 15 p.176
I'm usually in complete sympathy (1) Sir James's views, but you can't expect me
to feel sympathetic (2) him when he speaks (3) wishing to lead his party (4) an
alliance with the Democrats.
I don't approve (5) his son's recent activities either. Do you know that Toby
Blenkinsop's debts now amount (6) over twenty thousand pounds? I'm sorry I
consented (7) his using my name in a job application.
When I come home from the office I change (8) casual clothes. I then feel free
(9) the restraints of my working life. My mood, in fact, changes (10) the clothes I
wear.
Ken's competing (11) some of our best local runners (12) the Athletic Club
Trophy. I've warned him (13) the dangers involved (14) competing (15) this
event, as some of the runners will resort (16) all sorts of dirty tricks in order to
win. In particular I've warned him (17) a fellow called Plunger who specialises
(18) jabbing his opponents with his spiked shoes. I carry a scar that resulted (19)
that fellow's attentions.
Zena says that if one is patient (20) alligators and doesn't interfere (21) them or
their habits they behave very well. She says they're very sensitive (22) changes
(23) the environment. I should have thought that Zena's alligator would find her
flat a great change (24) the swamps of Florida.
Willie is an architect. At present he's working (25) a town development scheme.
He works very hard (26) his job and seems to find great pleasure (27) puzzling
(28) the problems of his profession. Sometimes he's so occupied (29) his work
that he's scarcely conscious (30) the passage of time.
10 15 p.176
Willie beat Ken (1) tennis the other day. Ken is now determined to have his
revenge (2) Willie (3) his defeat, and says he will show no mercy (4) Willie in
their next match. Willie, for his part, says he will have no mercy (5) Ken either.
He says a good racket is essential (6) victory, and has fitted his (7) a special grip.
As a public figure, a Member of Parliament is responsible not only (8) his
constituents but (8) the public at large (9) his conduct. I am glad to say that Sir
176
DEPENDENT PREPOSITIONS 15
James is an MP who has never been concerned (10) any scandal at all.
Robert has now decided (11) university and football in favour of the latter. He
says he can't share his time or his enthusiasm for football (12) anything else. It's
impossible to reason (13) him (14) the subject, as he has clearly made up his mind
(15) it. Robert's father, who until recently was ignorant (16) his son's decision,
seethed (17) anger when informed (18) it.
A few people may criticise modern domestic gadgetry, but most of us are highly
satisfied (19) it. Things like a washing machine give relief (20) drudgery, so that
we can attend more (21) our own interests, while television and hi-fi can provide
the intellectual stimulation that is often missing (22) the daily round.
Since it is important (23) many parents that their children should be provided (24)
after their own deaths, a large part of their time is spent (25) finding ways round
the inheritance laws. They do not see why they should not invest (26) their
children's future if they want to.
The firm that supplies us (27) nuts and bolts say that they are having production
difficulties and that we must allow (28) considerable delays (29) delivery when
we order. Is there any possibility (30) our getting them any where else?
177
16 Phrasal verbs
Introductory note: Phrasal verbs are a vital, expressive part of the language,
particularly of the informal, everyday sort. A good knowledge of them goes a
long way towards being a good knowledge of English itself. Their grammar is
dealt with in 16A. The Exercises in 16B give further practice in this grammar
while aiming principally to extend your vocabulary of phrasal verbs and of their
more formal synonyms (which are mainly Latin-derived). The study lists in 17G
will help you to this end.
178
PHRASAL VERBS 16A
179
16A PHRASAL VERBS
between the informal phrasal verb and its more formal or literary counterpart
(see 16B). Note, however, that this correspondence can depend on the
context. Thus in the Examples (4, 5) introduce is bring in, but to introduce
person X to person Y is not to bring in X to Y.
Has your secretary fixed up (the —> 1 Has your secretary fixed up the
interview/it) yet? interview/fixed the interview
up yet?
2 Has your secretary fixed it up
yet?
I take back (all the rude things I —> 1 I take back all the rude things I
said/them all). said.
2 I take them all back.
I wish I could get out of (going to —> 1 I wish I could get out of going to
his wedding/it). his wedding.
2 I wish I could get out of it.
1 16A p.180
1 As an actor Zena's father looked down on (ordinary mortals/them).
2 He put on (a superior air/one) to impress people.
3 But it didn't take in (people/them).
4 You must admit he was a marvellous mimic; he could take off (some of our
public figures/them) brilliantly.
5 His wife gave up (her own career/it) for his sake.
6 He got through (all her money/it all) in no time.
7 She had put by (quite a tidy sum/it) for a rainy day.
8 Why on earth did she put up with (the man/him)?
9 She was afraid of letting down (her husband/him) at the peak of his career.
10 She turned down (all offers of help/them all).
I1 She laughed off (one outrageous episode after another/them all).
12 I can't make out (why she did so/it).
13 He never owned up to (treating her badly/it).
14 Well, he certainly didn't get away with (the way he behaved/it) in the end.
15 Why are you always running down (the man/him)?
16 You don't expect me to stick up for (the man/him), do you?
171 think you make up (most of these stories/them).
18 Zena will bear out (what I've said/it).
19 She takes after (her father/him) in many ways.
20 I gently pointed out (the fact/it) to her.
180
PHRASAL VERBS 16B
2 16B p.181
1 They want to do away with (the British monarchy/it).
2 They look on (the monarchy/it) as outdated.
3 They aim also to bring down (the Government/it).
4 They'd like to hold up (this Government's legislative programme/it).
5 They hope to win over (all the workers/them all).
6 They say that if they won power they'd let o//(the workers/them) their
taxes.
7 They'd wipe out (all opposition/it all).
8 They'd take over (all the mass media/them all).
9 They'd try out (their new social system/it) on us.
10 They don't realise how long it takes to build up (a social system/one).
11 You can't just think out (a social system/one) overnight and expect it to
work in the morning.
12 People should think more than twice before setting about (the task of
reforming society/it).
13 But they mean to carry out (their so-called reforms/them).
14 They've drawn up (a political manifesto/one).
15 Their stated aim is to set up (a republic/one).
16 They say they've worked out (how to do it/it).
17 Now, they say, they're getting down to (the practical details/them).
18 They threaten in the next election to put up (a candidate/one) in each
constituency.
19 If they do that, we can't rule out (the possibility of their winning a seat or
two in Parliament/it).
20 Well, well! 1 don't believe a word you say! But as Home Secretary
I'd
better look into (the matter/it).
181
16B PHRASAL VERBS
'Robert has been saying that exams are unfair and should be (I) abolished. He
won't (2) avoid severe criticism for a remark like that in his family. I don't
know what's (3) caused this sudden change of attitude.'
'His attitude hasn't changed; he's never liked hard work. He (4) resembles his
mother in that respect.'
'How do we (5) take steps towards reforming him, then?'
'Charles was on his way home from school yesterday when a dog (6) attacked
him and took a piece out of his trousers.'
'He was no doubt (7) loitering in some backstreet.'
'What are you (8) implying? That it was Charles's fault?'
'Not necessarily. But I know from experience that man-against-dog situations
usually (9) arise because the man interferes with the dog and not vice versa.'
The conductor raised his baton and conversation (10) became fainter and then
ceased; there was silence in the concert hall.
'There's a general air of gloom in this firm that is beginning to (5) depress me.'
'It shouldn't. The management's directive (6) stipulates quite clearly what we
should do.'
'I don't see how we can possibly (7) reduce our overhead expenses.'
'We can if we (8) work really hard at the task. I (9) attribute our past failure to
lack of real determination.'
The railwaymen's strike could have (10) caused the Government to fall. The
Transport Minister's remark that their revolt should have been (11) suppressed at
once (12) was not well received [change passive to active], with the result that
they (13) rejected the last wage offer. However, now that the Minister has (14)
moderated his criticism of the railwaymen, the excitement has (15) abated and
agreement may soon be reached.
182
PHRASAL VERBS 16B
A stink bomb (8) exploded in the lecture theatre and (9) emitted a most foul
odour. When discovered, the culprit tried to (10) make light of the episode,
clearly expecting to (11) escape with just a warning, but I see his name has been
(12) deleted from the faculty list, which serves him right, because he has (13)
deterred a lot of people from going to lectures.
'Why does young Charles always (14) go away quickly at the sight of his
headmaster?'
'Because Charles used to (15) mimic him. One day the headmaster heard him and
(16) reprimanded him. He told Charles that if he wanted to (17) demonstrate
how clever he was in front of the other boys he needed more practice.'
Our tutor has (18) excused us our weekly seminar so that we can (19) bid
farewell to Christine at the airport. I'm afraid she'll feel terribly (20) isolated from
her friends once the novelty of being in a strange country (21) passes away.
184
PHRASAL VERBS 16B
When we (1) calculated the weekly figures at the office yesterday we found we (2)
were in error by over three hundred pounds in our accounts. We just couldn't (3)
understand what was wrong. You can imagine how (4) disconcerted we were
when Denis (5) drew attention to a simple mistake in our calculations.
Helen claims that it was Denis and not Brenda who (6) planned in detail the new
filing system which has (7) eliminated so much unnecessary work at the office, and
that several people are prepared to (8) corroborate what she says. She's apparently
determined to (9) decide the issue one way or another with Brenda herself sooner
or later.
Helen (10) exhausts people with her continual arguing. It's a childhood habit that
she has never (11) left behind her. Adults should be able to (12) resolve their
differences in a civilised way, but it looks as if Helen and I are going to (13)
become enemies.
After saying they would all support the scheme, some of them (14) withdrew their
support, so it's now going to be difficult to (15) put the scheme into effect.
However, one shouldn't (16) exclude the possibility of its eventually being (17)
given a trial at least on a small scale.
Her son's infantry platoon was (18) killed to a man. They (19) announced the
news on the radio. When she heard it she (20) fainted. Apparently he could
have (21) avoided serving overseas if he had wanted to.
He (22) was conspicuous everywhere by reason of his height. I'm afraid I'm
conspicuous only because my stomach (23) protrudes.
185
16B PHRASAL VERBS
(13) gain the support of the shareholders, since they won't want our plans to
(14) come to nothing and another firm to (15) gain control of us any more than
we do. We're sure that, like us, they'll think that once you start something
you should (16) persevere and complete it.
186
17 Study lists
Note: These are the verbs used in the Examples and Exercises in I A. Not all of
them are irregular verbs, since regular verbs (e.g. flow, lay, raise, stroke) can also
cause difficulty through confusion with irregular ones (fly, lie, rise, strike).
Pronunciation, when given, is in brackets ( ).
187
17B STUDY LISTS
a In sentences beginning with how that do not expect an answer (rhetorical questions), dare is
always used as an auxiliary verb like can, will etc., that is to say, without auxiliary do and
without the third person ending in -s:
How dare she say that about me!
In negative sentences or in true questions, dare may be used either as an auxiliary verb or as a
main (non-auxiliary) verb with a plain or a full infinitive:
Dare he ask/Will he dare (to) ask ?
No, he daren't ask/doesn't dare (to) ask/won't dare (to) ask.
Dared he do it/Did he dare (to) do it, I wonder?
No, he dared not do it/didn't dare (to) do it.
In affirmative constructions, which are less common than the above, dare is normally used with a
full infinitive (10Ab):
One day he may dare to ask her.
The ing form of dare is always followed by the full infinitive:
He stared at her, not daring to say a word.
For dare meaning challenge, see I7C.
188
STUDY LISTS 17C
189
17D STUDY LISTS
a Ask. beg, expect, wish can also be followed directly by a full infinitive, as in 'We asked to
see the director/He begged to be allowed to stay/She wishes to leave.' Alternative
active/passive constructions are often possible:
I'm expecting a friend to meet me at the airport.
I'm expecting to be met at the airport by a friend.
b Depend on and rely on are prepositional verbs and (see 10C) can also be followed by -ing
(gerund):
She relies on me to wake her every morning.
She relies on me/my waking her every morning.
c For wish used with a past or conditional tense for non-fact, see 1E.
d There are a number of verbs like believe, consider, know, prove, show, think that may be
followed by an object + to be but which have not been included in this list because (i) they
are more commonly used with a that clause and (ii) after most of them to be can be omitted:
i They knew/showed etc. the theory to be wrong —> They knew/showed etc. (that)
the theory was wrong.
ii They believed/considered/proved/thought the theory (to be)
wrong.
For the use of some of these verbs in the passive, see 13B.
e For verbs that may take an object + full infinitive or -ing depending on use or meaning, see
10Cb, e and 10Db, c.
190
STUDY LISTS 17D
recall c risk
recollect c stand ( = tolerate)
recommend b stop (= pi event) e
report c stop ( = cease) f
require ( = be in need of) suggest c
resent there is no g
resist tolerate
191
17E STUDY LISTS
ii Verbs similar to the above but requiring in the passive the prepositions
given in brackets (see 13Aj):
iii Verbs where one or both objects can not become subjects in corresponding
passives (see 13Aq-s for key):
*sb. = somebody: sth = something. The other objects given are typical but are not the only possible ones.
192
•
STUDY LISTS 17F
193
17F STUDY LISTS
194
STUDY LISTS 17F
* In this meaning, agree is being increasingly used without a preposition as a transitive verb.
195
17G STUDY LISTS
196
STUDY LISTS 17G
198
Subject index
References are similar to those used in the text, namely to numbered (1 etc.)
and lettered (A etc.) sections and to entries (a etc.) under their respective
Explanations.
199
SUBJECT INDEX no proofreading
200
SUBJECT INDEX
201
SUBJECT INDEX
state: against activity 1Bs; and simple present 1BdelmC; present perfect
tense form 1Bs; past 11Ba; use of IBckCjm; relationship with time
adjectives for 2Aa; verbs used for IBCDFb. 7. 10AgBh, 13Bb: seealso
IBS, 8Ca PROGRESSIVE TENSE FORM; SIMPLE TENSE
statements: relatives after 8Ag FORM; SUBJUNCTIVE
stress 7j, 9d, 11Bd-fEb, 14Ah; and time: adverbials 2B, 7; and gerund
adverb position 2Begkl 10Bh; and infinitive 10Ag, 13Bb; and
subject: change of 3Bfn, 4Aa-c, 7a; in relatives 8Cb; and tenses 1BCDFb. 7,
passive 13A; introduced by if 10AgBh, 13Bb; future in the past 1Bp,
10AcBa, 13Ab; introduced by what 11Bf; Links for 1C, 7; period of
IDAcBa IBah point of 1Babcghln, 12Ah
subjunctive: and reported speech tone change: for cause 3Af; for result
12Ag; present (be etc.) 11Fe; were 3Aa; with might 11Eb; with
form 1DabEaFa, 12Ag relatives SAabC
suggestions: in reported speech 12Ccdf; typical behaviour with would lIBe
with should 1 IFa;' with Why not... ?
17Bh unrelated participle 7a
superlatives 8AI unwillingness with will not/would not 11Bf
supposition: links for 1D: tense use
for 1DF; with future time reference verb-noun: see GERUND
verbs:
IDb; with mixed time reference 1Dd; ™d gerund 10Bb. 17D; and
with past time reference 1Dc; with gerund or infinitive IOC, 17CbDa; and
present time reference 1Da infinitive or present participle 10D.
surprise with should IIFa and object + infinitive OAb, 17C; and
plain infinitive 10Aa, 17B; and
tenses: after as if/as though IFc; after prepositions 17Fii; irregular 17A;
first etc. time 1Cm; after if etc. of perception 1Bs; prepositional
1CDFb; after time links 1CFb; 13Adn; referring to activity 1Bs,
changes in reported speech 12A; 11BC; referring to state 1 Bs, 2Aa;
conditional 1DEcFad-f; for fact regular 17A; with adjectives or
IBFbce, fornon-fact 1DEFacdf; for adverbs 2Aa, with two objects
fact against non-fact IF; for 13Af-kq-t, 17E: see also PHRASAL
supposition 1DFad; for wish VERBS; TENSES
lEFad; future 1BfgnqrCdk-n;
future perfect 1BgqCm; future use of will, willingness MBf
going to 1Bp; future use of present wish: tense use for 1EF
IBemC; future use of present perfect word order: with phrasal verbs
1Cjm; past 1BahDabEafgFace. 7bf. 16Ac-h; with enough 3B11-1; with
17A; past perfect 1BbjDcdEdg, 7bef; too 3Ba-c: see also INVERSION
202
Word index no proofreading
References are similar to those used in the text, namely to numbered (1 etc.) and
lettered (A etc.) sections and to entries (a etc.) under their respective
Explanations. Words in study lists 17B—G are indexed here only if they are
referred to elsewhere in the book or in the notes that are attached to some of the
lists. References marked * are to footnotes on the pages indicated.
203
WORD INDEX
204
WORD INDEX
205
WORD INDEX
206
WORD INDEX