Lds non-finite verbs
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Transcript of Lds non-finite verbs
Language Description
•Lecturer : Miss Goh Meng Hong
•Group : 2
•Members :
Hisyan Bin Ruaini
Amirul Asyraf Bin Baharuddin
Mohd Afif Bin Nor Setilah
Ahmad Izzuddin Bin Ibrahim
1
Non-finite verbs
infinitives participles gerunds
Definition
has no subject, tense or
number.
Are infinitives, participles and
gerunds
INFINITIVES ACTIVE PASSIVE
Present Tense To hear To be heard
Perfect Tense To have heard To have been heard
PARTICIPLES ACTIVE PASSIVE
Present Tense hearing being heard
Perfect Tense having heard (having been ) heard
GERUNDS ACTIVE PASSIVE
Present Tense hearing being heard
Present Tense having heard having been heard
Infinitives
The present infinitive active to hear is
often called the infinitive of the verb
“hear”; and the equivalent of “to hear” is
the form of the verb which is listed in the
dictionaries of many foreign languages.
The following passages uses all of the
infinitives in turn:
‘I was so glad to hear your voice on the
phone. I am pleased to have heard from
john, too.John’s ambition is to be heard on
the radio.His father is still proud to have
been heard singing in a pre-war concert’
In modern English, the “to” of the infinitives
is omitted when it follows certain other
verbs.
Example:-
I need to say anymore.(I do not need to say.....)
We dared not resist.(We did not dare to resist)
I can tell you the result.(I am able to tell you...)
Split infinitives
To ‘split’ an infinitive means to put this
adverb between the to and the rest of
the infinitive.
Example;
To frequently forget.
To completely have been forgotten.
Though the old rule of never splitting your
infinitives may be too sweeping, you are
often likely to produce better English if you
avoid a split infinitive. There are several
ways of moving the adverb out of the danger
zone.
Example;
Frequently to forget; or to forget frequently.
To have been completely forgotten; or to
have been forgotten completely.
Participles
Are verbal adjectives (adjective formed
from verbs).
There are 4 participles (see table on the
3rd slide).
Help to form finite tenses.
Describe nouns and pronouns.
Forming finite tenses :
The participles hearing, being heard, and heard form part most of the indicative and many of the subjunctive tenses.
The tenses are produced by combining these participles with auxiliary (helping) verbs such as I am, I was, I have, I have been.
The participles also form part of some tenses of the infinitives and the gerunds.
Describing nouns and pronouns
:
Like all adjectives, participles describe
or qualify nouns and pronouns.
Present participles are used in the
following examples :
1. a rolling stone gathers no moss.
2. we saw a boulder rolling down the
mountain.
Both present participles are active, the
first describe stone, the second describe
boulder.
3. we watched the barrels being rolled
into the warehouse.
Here being rolled is a passive present
participles describing barrels.
Perfect participles are used in these
examples :
1. having spoken, he sat down.
2. he went home, delighted by the
enthusiasm of the audience.
In each sentence the participles
describes he.
With objects :
Because they are verbal adjectives,
actives participles of transitive verbs can
have objects.
In the sentence ‘we watched him playing
football’, the present participle playing
describes him and has the object
football.
Participles out of control :
A participles qualifies a noun or a pronoun; but, to show which noun or pronoun a participle belongs to, you must keep strict control over its position in the sentence.
Otherwise, almost as if the particile had a life in its own, it can become attached to the wrong noun – or even left ‘floating’ without a noun at all.
As a result, a sentence may acquire a meaning which was not intended or be reduced to nonsense.
Examples :
1. ‘washing the car, the postman brought me a letter.’ this can only mean that the postman was washing the car, which is not the speaker’s intention. The sentence should begin ‘As I was washing. . . ‘
2. ‘seeing the Cathedral tower ahead, the market-place could not be far away.’ here the participle seeing has completely lost its noun or pronouns. Who was doing the seeing? Not the market-place, certainly, but some travellerwho then realized that the market-place. . .
3. ‘My father was stopped by a policeman hurrying down the road on his way to the railway station.’ here the sense is ambiguous. It could mean that the policeman was in a hurry to catch his train. But it was probably intended to mean : ‘my father, hurrying down the road on his way to the railway station, was stopped by a policeman.’
The examples use present participles
because these are the most liable to get
out of control.
But similar mistakes can also be made
with perfect participles.
The only way to avoid them is to make
sure that a participle belongs to a noun
or a pronoun, and that it is placed as
near as possible in order to make the
meaning quite clear.
Gerunds
gerund is identical in form to the
present participle (ending in -ing) and
can behave as a verb within
a clause (so that it may be modified by
an adverb or have an object), but the
clause as a whole (sometimes
consisting of only one word, the gerund
itself) acts as a noun within the larger
sentence
example: Eating this cake is easy
Some use "gerund" to refer to all nouns
ending in -ing, but in more careful use,
not all nouns ending in -ing are gerunds
gerund is a verbal noun – a noun
derived from a verb that retains verb
characteristics, that
functions simultaneously as a noun and
a verb, while other nouns ending in -
ing are deverbal nouns, which function
as common noun like fencing. (gerund,
an activity, could be replaced with "to
fence")mon nouns, not as verbs at all
gerund has nominal and verbal
properties nominal characteristics of the gerund are as
follows:
The gerund can perform the function of subject, object and predicative:Smokingendangers your health. (subject)
I like making people happy. (object)
The gerund can be preceded by a preposition: I'm tired of arguing.
Like a noun the gerund can be modified by a noun in the possessive case, a possessive adjective, or an adjective: I wonder at John's keeping calm.
Is there any objection to my seeing her?
Brisk walking relieves stress.
The verbal characteristics of the gerund include the following:
The gerund of transitive verbs can take a direct object:
I've made good progress in speaking English.
The gerund can be modified by an adverb:
Breathing deeply helps you to calm down.
The gerund has the distinctions of aspect and voice.
Having read the book once before makes me more prepared.
Being deceived can make someone feel angry.
Summary of the non-finite parts
of a verb The infinitive are the forms of a verb which are
proceeded by to, but the to of the infinitive is omitted in modern English when it follows certain other verbs. It is usually advisable to avoid “splitting” an infinitive, which means placing an adverb between to and the rest of the infinitive.
The participles are verbal adjectives.They are used together with auxiliary verbs to form most of the indicative tenses (and also many of the subjunctive and imperative forms and some tenses of the infinitive and the gerund). Like other adjectives, they can also qualify nouns and pronouns.A common mistake is to misplace sentence (participles out of control).
The gerunds are verbal nouns.