Sentence Patterns 123
Sentence Patterns 123
We do not speak English by merely stringing words together in some random fashion. Instead,
we carefully arrange our words, for the most part unconsciously, into patterns. In English we use nine
basic sentence patterns and a multitude of subpatterns. It will now be our purpose to examine these
basic sentence patterns of English. Any sentence you speak will probably be based on one of them.
Included in these nine basic sentence patterns are specific sentence positions. Each position in each
pattern is the home-slot of a particular grammatical meaning. Let us pause here to see what is meant by
grammatical meaning. One pattern you will soon meet is illustrated by this sentence:
The girl bought a dress
The noun girl, in isolation, would me an simply "young female human being." But by dint of occupying the
first position in this pattern it acquires, the additional meaning of the performer of the action, in this case,
bought.
In another pattern, as shown by,
.
The girl is happy,
girl is not the performer of any action but, in this position in this pattern, has an added grammatical
meaning of "that which is described:"
Similarly, the verb, which occupies the second slot in each pattern, has the grammatical meaning
of predication, assertion. It predicates or asserts the occurrence of an action or the existence of a
condition, as in
Dick broke a branch.
She seemed alarmed
It is the grammatical motor of the sentence. 'When attention is focused on the grammatical meaning, the
verb is called predicator. In general practice, however, the term verb is commonly used for both aspects
of the verb, its form as part of speech and its meaning as predicator.
Thus grammatical meaning is a meaning that is added to the sentence by virtue of a particular
position in a particular pattern-' Now let us look it the patterns.
The first three patterns have only be as their verb. It is necessary to give be this special
treatment because it behaves somewhat differently from other linking verbs. And it is to be remembered
that be has eight different forms: am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been.
Pattern 1: N be Aj
Food
is
good.
In the nine basic patterns the subject always occurs in the first N position. In Pattern 1 the grammatical
meaning of the subject is "that-which is described."
In each of the first three patterns the verb be has a different meaning. There the meaning is
"may be described as:"
In Pattern 1 the third term must be an adjective or adjectival:
That food is poisonous.
You can test for Pattern 1 in a simple way. It is capable of this expansion:
Pattern 2: N
be
The girl
here.
is
Av
Pattern 3: N1 be
N1
My brother
is
a doctor.
The number after the N (noun) means that the two nouns have the same referent; that is, both brother
and doctor refer to the same person. The meaning of be in Pattern 3 is "be identified or classified as."
The first N1 (subject) has the grammatical meaning of "that which is identified." The second N1 means
grammatically "that which identifies the subject" and is called the subjective complement. Personal
pronouns also occupy this position.
This is she.
It's me.
It was they.
That is mine.
The following sentences are examples of Pattern 3:
These coeds must be roommates.
They are my friends.
He had never been an honor student.
Harry is my favorite uncle
Exercise 3
Indicate the pattern of each sentence by the numbers 1, 2, or 3.
___1. Sandy must have been the thief.
___2. The dinner was over.
___3. The dinner was tasty.
___4. The dinner was a feast.
___5. The Indians were the winners.
___6. My cousin is a fool.
___7. My cousin is proud.
___8. The policeman may be wise.
___9. The policeman may be there.
___10. Policemen are the guardians of the law.