Difference between revisions of "Be"

From Creolista!
Jump to: navigation, search
(Forms)
(copula: syntax: simplify)
Line 18: Line 18:
  
 
Most fundamentally <i>be</i> is a coupler.  It connects two ideas.  Let's start with this basic understanding and look at what it couples:
 
Most fundamentally <i>be</i> is a coupler.  It connects two ideas.  Let's start with this basic understanding and look at what it couples:
 
=copula: syntax=
 
 
En semantique on parlerait plutôt de sa fonction, qui est souvent de lier un sujet à un attribut ou un ensemble (ou l'invers)...
 
<ol>
 
 
<li>It's a worktool. (NP)</li>
 
<li>A worktool, is it?</li><br>
 
 
<li>The door is open. (Adj)</li>
 
<li>They're sick.</li><br>
 
 
<li>The machine is breaking.  (You can hear it.)  (Present Participle)
 
<li>The machine is broken.  (Past participle)</li><br>
 
 
<li>Is Raymond in?  (Particle)</li>
 
<li>Mark isn't. (negation) (VP ellipsis)</li><br>
 
 
<li>These ideas aren't mine.  (sujet parlant est bizarrement attribut du sujet grammatical)</li><br>
 
 
<li>Were they <u>to lose the lawsuit</u>, they would probably go bankrupt. (Infintival expressing a condition)<br>
 
<li>They were to lose in the end. (infinitival expressing a historical fact known to the storyteller)
 
</ol>
 
  
 
=introduces partiples and participials=
 
=introduces partiples and participials=

Revision as of 11:11, 23 December 2019

Avertissement: cette page est destiné à un analyse grammatical du mot "be" :P


Forms

  • dictionary form (bare infinitive): be
  • present tense: am (1s), is (3s), are (1p, 2s/p, 3p)
  • past tense: was (1s, 3s), were (1p, 2s/p, 3p)


  • present participle: being
  • past participle: been

Major Uses

Most fundamentally be is a coupler. It connects two ideas. Let's start with this basic understanding and look at what it couples:

introduces partiples and participials

continuous / progressive (be + -ing)

Much has been said about this active voice tense. Present tense participles following the copula are common. The participle can be interpreted as a verb, a noun (usually called a gerund), or an adjective.

  • He was writing. (V)
  • This is (his) writing. (N)
  • It is interesting. (Adj)

Only the first is considered verbal.

The terms "continuous" and "progressive" are both inappropriate in some ways. The use of be + ing usually implies that the speaker is putting the listener in the middle of the action "in medias res": the speaker or writer is like a filmmaker recording an action. Alternately, it can indicate a series of occurrences.

The term is however historically justified because be + -ing derives etymologically from be + on + -ing

passive voice marker (be + -en)

  • Lincoln and Kennedy were both assassinated.
  • Everything was frozen.
  • It was golden. (ADJ, (predicate adjective))