1 / 10

Negative Sentences

Negative Sentences. Ed McCorduck English 402--Grammar SUNY Cortland http://mccorduck.cortland.edu. We will say that negative sentences, i.e., the negation of normal affirmative, declarative sentences, is accomplished through the negative transformation , which can formulated in this way:

matty
Download Presentation

Negative Sentences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Negative Sentences Ed McCorduck English 402--Grammar SUNY Cortland http://mccorduck.cortland.edu

  2. We will say that negative sentences, i.e., the negation of normal affirmative, declarative sentences, is accomplished through the negative transformation, which can formulated in this way: subj + aux + MV ⇒ subj + aux + NOT + MV slide 2: formulation of the negative transformation English 402: Grammar

  3. slide 3: examples of applying the negative transformation He has cut off his funny nose. subj aux MV ⇒ He has not (hasn’t) cut off his funny nose. aux MV (occasionally: He’s not cut… ) The demonic dogs were removed by Animal Control. subj aux MV ⇒ The demonic dogs were not (weren’t) removed by Animal Control. aux MV English 402: Grammar

  4. slide 4: more examples of applying the negative transformation That musical fiasco will close right away. subj aux MV ⇒ That musical fiasco will not (won’t) close right way. aux MV Her sympathy act is becoming tiresome. subj aux MV ⇒ Her sympathy act is not (isn’t) becoming tiresome. aux MV English 402: Grammar

  5. If the underlying sentence does onot have an aux, if the MV is be, the not is inserted after the verb His puns are corny. MV ⇒ His puns are not (aren’t) corny. (occasionally, mostly spoken: His puns’re not corny.) slide 5: the negative of sentences whose MV is be English 402: Grammar

  6. slide 6: the negative of sentences that do not have an aux nor MV be if the MV is not be, the do-support transformation applies before the negative transformation) ex underlying structure: Rhett gives a damn ⇒ application of do-support: Rhett does give a damn ⇒ application of negative transformation: Rhett does not give a damn (doesn’t) English 402: Grammar

  7. slide 7: another example of the application of do-support and negation to make a negative sentence ex underlying structure: They stunk up the place. ⇒ application of do-support: They did stink up the place. ⇒ application of negative transformation: They did not stink up the place. (didn’t) English 402: Grammar

  8. Negative sentences are diagrammed like their corresponding emphatic sentences (see the “Do Support and Emphatic Sentences” lecture), i.e., the inserted form of do and the negative particle not are placed together with the main verb on the main horizontal line after the vertical subject/predicate divider line. For example, here is the Reed-Kellogg diagram of the Pattern VII (affirmative) sentence Rhett gives a damn: slide 8: Reed-Kellogg diagrams of negative sentences English 402: Grammar

  9. Here is the Reed-Kellogg diagram of the emphatic sentence Rhett does give a damn: slide 9: example of a Reed-Kellogg diagram of an emphatic sentence English 402: Grammar

  10. And here is the Reed-Kellogg diagram of the negative sentence Rhett doesn’t give a damn: slide 10: example of a Reed-Kellogg diagram of a negative sentence English 402: Grammar

More Related