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The list isn't meant to be exhaustive or carefully arranged. Any additions, corrections or further examples would be welcomed.
1 main verbs; lexical verbs (all verbs which are not
auxiliaries or modals)
2 action verbs; event
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
ganesh77
1 yr 251 days ago
Articles, Prepositions, Constructions, Clauses, Nouns, Adverbs, Auxiliaries, Modals, Gerunds, Prepositional Verbs, Direct Objects, Modal Verbs, Indirect Objects, Inflections, Dynamic Verbs
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. 1.-- I would guess that there are several ways to approach this; here's mine: I - Subject got - verb used - predicate adjective to - preposition your - possessive adjective being - gerund (object of preposition) here - noun complement 2. Is
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I got used to your being here.
1. How would this sentence be parsed?
2. Is 'used to' a prepositional verb?
3. How does 'here', which is an adverb, modify 'being', which is a gerund (noun)?
4. What if
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what is the role (or roles) of the word "about"? Clearly, it's part of the prepositional verb "told about". But is it also (and
simultaneously) considered to be a separate entity - a preposition? Given the sentence in isolation (i.e. outside
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Thanks; that explanation was very informative. There is one point I'm still unclear about. In the sentence "I told her about the facts," what is the role (or roles) of the word "about"? Clearly, it's part of the prepositional verb "told about".
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Tell about is one of the 'prepositional verbs', where the prepositional phrase is considered an alternative 'paraphrase' of the direct object . I told her (IO) the facts (DO) I told the facts (DO) to her (prepositional complement) I told her (IO)
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I checked the first couple of pages of Google hits for "mention about"
and "discuss about" and most of them are totally wrong.
Apparently it is a common mistake.
However, note that you will get hits on these combinations which are correct
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If I won't shoot at any soldier, I won't kill any soldiers. Just
my point. In both cases I would use the plural because both are
complements, not adjuncts. That's why I said complement rather
than object. shoot at is a prepositional verb with
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all the way home is an adverbial phrase indicating during/along the entire trip/path/way to their home . It is a curious mix of adverb of place (path, actually) and adverb of time (period, actually). Individually, all is an adverb of degree (how
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What you call a "phrasal verb with a preposition" doesn't seem correct.
A verb-plus-preposition structure like expand on is usually called a prepositional verb.
Only a verb-plus-adverb structure like catch on is usually called a phrasal
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