Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
collins cobuild english grammar.doc
Скачиваний:
162
Добавлен:
11.02.2016
Размер:
5.71 Mб
Скачать

8 Combining messages 262

Adverbial clauses 263

Time clauses 264

Conditional clauses 267

Purpose clauses 270

Reason clauses 270

Result clauses 271

Concessive clauses 272

Place clauses 274

Clauses of manner 274

Relative clauses 275

Using relative pronouns in defining clauses 276

Using relative pronouns in non-defining clauses 276

Using relative pronouns with prepositions 277

Using 'whose' 277

Using other relative pronouns 278

Additional points about non-defining relative clauses 278

Nominal relative clauses 279

Non-finite clauses 280

Using non-defining clauses 280

Using defining clauses 281

Other structures used like non-finite clauses 281

Coordination 282

Linking clauses 282

Linking verbs 284

Linking noun groups 285

Linking adjectives and adverbs 286

Linking other word groups 287

Emphasizing coordinating conjunctions 287

Linking more than two clauses or word groups 288

Contents of Chapter 9 288

9 Making texts 289

Referring back 289

Referring back in a specific way 290

Referring back in a general way 291

Substituting for something already mentioned: using 'so' and 'not' 293

Comparing with something already mentioned 294

Referring forward 295

Leaving out words: ellipsis 296

Ellipsis in conversation 298

Contents of Chapter 10 299

10 The structure of information 300

Introduction 300

Focusing on the thing affected: the passive voice 300

Selecting focus: cleft sentences 304

Taking the focus off the subject: using impersonal 'it' 305

Describing a place or situation 306

Talking about the weather and the time 306

Commenting on an action, activity, or experience 307

Commenting on a fact that you are about to mention 308

Introducing something new: 'there' as subject 308

Focusing on clauses or clause elements using adjuncts 310

Commenting on your statement: sentence adjuncts 310

Indicating your attitude to what you are saying 310

Stating your field of reference 312

Showing connections: linking adjuncts 313

Indicating a change in a conversation 314

Emphasizing 315

Indicating the most relevant thing: focusing adverbs 316

Other information structures 317

Putting something first: fronting 317

Introducing your statement: prefacing structures 318

Doing by saying: performative verbs 318

Exclamations 319

Making a statement into a question: question tags 320

Addressing people: vocatives 321

Contents of the Reference Section 322

Reference Section 322

Pronunciation guide 322

Forming plurals of count nouns 323

Forming comparative and superlative adjectives 324

The spelling and pronunciation of possessives 326

Numbers 327

Cardinal numbers 327

Ordinal numbers 328

Fractions and percentages 328

Verb forms and the formation of verb groups 329

Finite verb groups and the formation of tenses 335

Non-finite verb groups: infinitives and participles 338

Forming adverbs 340

Forming comparative and superlative adverbs 341

Index 342

4 Varying the message

4.1 This chapter deals with three different ways in which the meaning of a sentence can be varied, by altering the order of words or by adding other words to the verb group.

Paragraphs 4.2 to 4.42 explain how mood is used to distinguish between the main types of sentence, for example how it is used to distinguish statements and questions.

Paragraphs 4.43 to 4.94 explain how negative words are used to indicate the opposite of something or the absence of something.

Paragraphs 4.95 to 4.262 explain how modals are used to talk about possibility, or to indicate the attitude of the speaker to the hearer or to what is being said.

Соседние файлы в предмете [НЕСОРТИРОВАННОЕ]