Advanced English Grammar
A Linguistic Approach, 3rd Edition
By Ilse Depraetere and Chad Langford
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Imperative Clause, Imperative, see clause type
Impersonal Passive
An impersonal passive is a passive sentence in which the Subject position is filled by it, which is a placeholder for the notional subject featuring in end position. In other words, there is extraposition in sentences of this type: It is often argued that memory decreases with age. (AEG Ch. 2)
Impossibility, see negative possibility
Inanimate Noun
An inanimate noun has inanimate reference: table, jacket, joy. Its referent is not alive. The personal pronouns he, she and it are sensitive to animacy: only it – and not he and she – has inanimate reference. Animals, though animate, can often be referred to by it. The personal pronoun they, in contrast, in not sensitive to animacy. (AEG Ch. 3)
Indefinite Article
A is an indefinite article. The form an is used when the head noun has an initial vowel sound: an apple, an FBI agent, but a European country. The zero article (represented by Ø) – that is, the absence of any determiner – can likewise be considered a kind of indefinite article. The indefinite article serves to establish indefinite (rather than definite) reference, but it can be used both generically (A dog will always remain a loyal friend) and non-generically (Our neighbours have a loud dog). (AEG Ch. 3)
Indefinite Determiner
Some use the term indefinite pronoun or indefinite determiner to refer to quantifiers. This terminology can be useful in the sense that it differentiates between pronouns and determiners, whereas ‘quantifier’ leaves it vague whether there is a head following or not. On the other hand, while the majority of quantifiers have indefinite meaning, some of them do not (both, all, each).
Indefinite Perfect
The indefinite perfect refers to the use of a perfect tense that represents a situation as lying completely before the reference time (R). In other words, it does not continue up to, or include, R. Take for example the indefinite present perfect: the situation is located in the pre-present time-sphere and lies completely before the moment of speech (S): Have you ever been to Berlin? Indefinite past perfects (I had been to Berlin at that time) or future perfects (I will have been to Berlin at that point) are possible as well. In these cases, however, the situations are not located in the pre-present time-sphere. They are anterior to Rs that do not coincide with the moment of speech. (AEG Ch. 4)
Indefinite Pronoun, see indefinite determiner
Independent Genitive
An independent genitive is a genitive without a head noun: The cup over there is my dad’s, Have you visited St Paul’s?; You can buy vegan sausage at the butcher’s. (AEG Ch. 3)
Indirect Object
An Indirect Object (IO) can be identified by looking first for the Subject and the DO, and then asking to / for whom? or, sometimes, for / to what? Generally speaking, it is not possible to have an IO without a DO. IOs can be realized as NPs (They threw their grandkids a party) or PrepPs, headed by to or for (I gave it to her, He bought it for me). (AEG Ch. 1)
Individuating Noun
An individuating noun has a singular, countable referent: plate, postcard, bag, student. When it combines with a plural marker it has plural reference. (AEG Ch. 3)
Infinitive clause, see to-infinitive
Inflection
Inflection refers to the way the base form of a word (or lexeme) can change (often in the form of an ending added to the base form) to convey different kinds of grammatical information. In English, inflection mostly affects nouns, verbs, adjective and certain adverbs. Here are some examples:
- the plural of (regular) countable nouns is signalled by inflection: (/s/ - /z/ - /iz/), dog > dogs; cat > cats; ostrich > ostriches;
- the genitive of nouns is signalled by the same inflection: (/s/ - /z/ - /iz/), dog > dog’s; cat > cat’s; ostrich > ostrich’s;
- the 3rd-person singular (non-progressive) present tense of verbs is signalled by the same inflection as well: (/s/ - /z/ - /iz/), you think vs. he thinks; I swim vs she swims; they reach vs. it reaches – note, too, she is, he has, she does;
- the past tense of (regular) verbs is signalled by inflection: (/t/ - /d/ - /id/), work > worked; sag > sagged; visit > visited;
- the comparative and superlative of short adjectives and adverbs is signalled by inflection, -er and -est, respectively: hot > hotter > hottest; fast > faster > fastest.
Grammatical information is conveyed as much by the absence of inflection as by the presence of it: the (non-progressive) present tense, unless it has a 3rd-person Subject, is signalled by the lack of any overt inflection. Likewise, the singular form a countable noun is signalled by the lack of any overt inflection.
Grammatical information can also be conveyed by way of periphrastic forms. This includes, for example, the future tense (I am > I will be) and the comparative and superlative of longer adjectives and adverbs (intelligent, more intelligent, most intelligent; quickly, more quickly, the most quickly). (AEG Ch. 4)
Information Interrogative Clause
An information interrogative clause is so called because it is asking for missing information (rather than inquiring into whether a state of affairs is the case (yes) or not (no), as in a yes-no interrogative). It is also referred to as a wh-interrogative because many interrogative elements in English begin with the letters wh. The answer provides the information that the speaker is missing – yes or no is not a possible answer. This type of interrogative can also be called a partial interrogative (the scope of the interrogation is limited to part of the clause) or an open interrogative (any number of answers are possible): Where do you live? How are you doing? What’s the problem? (AEG Ch. 2)
Information Packaging
Speakers have a rich grammatical repertoire at their disposal. Information packaging refers to the different ways in which the (basically) same propositional content of a clause can be organized based on how a speaker wants to present the information. The passive voice (My bike was stolen (cf. Someone stole my bike)), it-clefts (It is sleep that I need (cf. I need sleep)), wh-clefts (What I need is sleep (cf. I need sleep)) and extraposition (It’s interesting that you think that (cf. That you think that is interesting) are all examples of specific ways of packaging information. (AEG Ch. 6)
-ing Clause
An ing-clause is a non-finite subclause that is headed by an -ing participle. An ing-clause can function as Subject (Raising a teenager is a challenge), a DO (I hate getting up at 6 am) or an Adjunct (Watching the sunset, I was suddenly overcome with awe.)
-ing Participle
The -ing participle is a non-finite form of the verb that takes the inflection -ing. It can function as a verb (They are playing bridge), but also as a nominal element (She enjoys playing bridge) or as an adjective (playing children). Some use the term gerund when referring to the nominal use of the -ing form and present participle to refer to the verbal use or use as an adjective. In AEG we use -ing participle as a cover term for all uses. (AEG Ch. 4)
Inherent Endpoint
When looking at different situation types, inherent endpoint is a parameter referring to a point in the situation beyond which it cannot continue: whereas drink wine does not have an inherent endpoint, drink a glass of wine does: once the quantity of wine in the glass has been drunk the situation is as it is represented in the clause (that of drinking a glass of wine) is exhausted. If a situation is represented in a clause as having an inherent endpoint, it does not necessarily mean that that endpoint is represented as having been reached: He is drinking a glass of wine. Achievements and Accomplishments have an inherent endpoint. Activities and States do not. (AEG Ch. 4)
Interjection
Interjections are relatively short units that express some sort of emotion (Wow! Damn! Oh my!) Since they are independent, stand-alone elements that are not integrated into a clause, they do not have a grammatical function. (AEG Ch. 1)
Interrogative Clause, Interrogative
An interrogative clause (or interrogative) is a form – it is the clause type typically used to ask a question. The word order usually exhibits inversion (with an auxiliary preceding the Subject: Where is you from? Is she Belgian?) when the clause is not embedded. An important exception is when (in an information interrogative) the wh-constituent functions as Subject: Who’s coming? What’s happening? (AEG Ch. 1, Ch. 2)
Interrogative Tag
An interrogative tag (also called a question tag or a tag question) is a short, elliptical interrogative clause immediately following an affirmative or negative declarative clause: He’s Italian, isn’t he?; She doesn’t like him, does she? The tag uses the same auxiliary as in the clause to which it is appended, with obligatory do-insertion if the clause does not have an auxiliary. The Subject is always a personal pronoun or there – full NPs are not found in interrogative tags. (AEG Ch. 2)
Interrogative, see interrogative clause (AEG Ch. 2)
Intransitive Verb
An intransitive verb is a lexical verb that does not allow a DO: He left (unexpectedly). She yawned (a lot). The bracketed items are Adjuncts, which are optional constituents. Some transitive verbs can be used intransitively: He’s reading a book vs. He’s reading; She’s eating her breakfast vs. She’s eating. (AEG Ch. 2)
Irrealis Mode, see past subjunctive
it-Cleft
An it-cleft is a grammatical construction in which a constituent is highlighted by placing it after It plus a finite form of the verb be (It is. . . It was. . .). The rest of the clause follows the subordinator that: It is sleep that I need. This means that the highlighted constituent does not feature in its normal place with respect to the other constituents: I need sleep. Instead of that, who sometimes introduces the rest of the sentence: It is Marie who arrived late. Other less common configurations are possible as well: It’s John with whom I’m in love. (AEG Ch. 6)