Difference between revisions of "Complement (grammar)"

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Traditionally, the only functions called Complements were the copular or adjectival Complement:
 
Traditionally, the only functions called Complements were the copular or adjectival Complement:
* The '''copular Complement''' follows the [[verb]] '[[to be]]' (this verb is called the ''copula'') or similar verbs like 'to become'. For example, in the sentence “She is Scottish”, ‘Scottish’ is the Complement of ‘is’; in the sentence “This is '''Hull'''”, ‘Hull’ is the '''complement''' of ‘is’; and ‘Thursday’ is the '''complement''' of ‘is’ in “Today is '''Thursday'''” .  
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* The '''copular Complement''' follows the [[verb]] '[[to be]]' (this verb is called the ''copula'') or similar verbs like 'to become'. For example, in the sentence “She is Scottish”, ‘Scottish’ is the Complement of ‘is’; in the sentence “This is ''Hull''”, ‘Hull’ is the complement of ‘is’; and ‘Thursday’ is the complement of ‘is’ in “Today is ''Thursday''” .  
 
*  The '''adjectival Complement''' (.... WRITE ME)
 
*  The '''adjectival Complement''' (.... WRITE ME)
  
 
Other functions may or may not be called Complements, depending on which grammarian you ask:
 
Other functions may or may not be called Complements, depending on which grammarian you ask:
  
* The '''prepositional complement''' is the name given to the [[noun]] or [[noun phrase]] that follows a [[preposition]], such as "in '''town'''", "at '''work'''", or "the pen of '''my aunt'''".
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* The '''prepositional complement''' is the name given to the [[noun]] or [[noun phrase]] that follows a [[preposition]], such as "in ''town''", "at ''work''", or "the pen of ''my aunt''".
  
* The '''Direct Object''' (in traditional Grammar called just the '''Object''') completes verbs by identifying what or whom they are 'done to' or performed on. Examples: "they built '''a house'''"; "Parliament passes '''laws'''"; "she made '''a mistake'''"; "I like '''him'''"; "she drives '''a Mercedes'''"; "we thought '''brown''', but we chose '''blue'''"; etc. Verbs that require this are called [[transitive]].
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* The '''Direct Object''' completes verbs by identifying what or whom they are 'done to' or performed on. (In traditional Grammar called just the Object; in modern grammars sometimes called the Complement Object Direct or CO<sub>d</sub>.) Examples: "they built ''a house''"; "Parliament passes ''laws''"; "she made ''a mistake''"; "I like ''him''"; "she drives ''a Mercedes''"; "we thought ''brown'', but we chose ''blue''"; etc. Verbs that require this are called [[transitive]].
  
* The '''[[Indirect Object]]''' is the second object for the clauses that have two, such as "she gave '''him '''(1) '''a book''' (2)"; "the mother sang '''her baby '''(1) '''a lullaby '''(2)"; "tell '''me''' (1) '''a story (2)'''". These are different to Direct Objects: we don't 'sing a baby' in the same way that we 'sing a song'. All the Objects marked (1) in these examples can be replaced by a Preposition Phrase with '''to''' or '''for ''' ("she gave a book '''to him'''"; "the mother sang a lullaby '''to her baby'''"; "tell a story '''to me'''").
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* The '''[[Indirect Object]]''' (or CO<sub>i</sub>) is the second object for the clauses that have two, such as "she gave ''him'' (1) ''a book'' (2)"; "the mother sang ''her baby'' (1) ''a lullaby'' (2)"; "tell ''me'' (1) ''a story'' (2)". These are different to Direct Objects: we don't 'sing a baby' in the same way that we 'sing a song'. All the Objects marked (1) in these examples can be replaced by a Preposition Phrase with 'to' or 'for' ("she gave a book ''to him''"; "the mother sang a lullaby ''to her baby''"; "tell a story ''to me''").
  
 
Some verbs - [[Intransitive verb]]s - do not have Objects. These are verbs such as 'to go', 'to come' and most verbs of motion, as well as other verbs. They are verbs which talk of actions that the Subject does, but does not do to anyone or anything. Examples: "I'm going"; "she was talking"; "the dog barked"; etc.
 
Some verbs - [[Intransitive verb]]s - do not have Objects. These are verbs such as 'to go', 'to come' and most verbs of motion, as well as other verbs. They are verbs which talk of actions that the Subject does, but does not do to anyone or anything. Examples: "I'm going"; "she was talking"; "the dog barked"; etc.

Revision as of 14:39, 21 April 2007

This article is part of the grammar course.

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(For the commonly confused homophones, see compliment - complement)

In grammar, a complement is that which completes a sentence. For some sentences, Subject + Verb is enough ("John runs"), for others, we instinctively feel that something more is required ("John built" -- we want to ask "what?"). There may be more than one Object, or Complement, in a Clause.

Traditionally, the only functions called Complements were the copular or adjectival Complement:

  • The copular Complement follows the verb 'to be' (this verb is called the copula) or similar verbs like 'to become'. For example, in the sentence “She is Scottish”, ‘Scottish’ is the Complement of ‘is’; in the sentence “This is Hull”, ‘Hull’ is the complement of ‘is’; and ‘Thursday’ is the complement of ‘is’ in “Today is Thursday” .
  • The adjectival Complement (.... WRITE ME)

Other functions may or may not be called Complements, depending on which grammarian you ask:

  • The prepositional complement is the name given to the noun or noun phrase that follows a preposition, such as "in town", "at work", or "the pen of my aunt".
  • The Direct Object completes verbs by identifying what or whom they are 'done to' or performed on. (In traditional Grammar called just the Object; in modern grammars sometimes called the Complement Object Direct or COd.) Examples: "they built a house"; "Parliament passes laws"; "she made a mistake"; "I like him"; "she drives a Mercedes"; "we thought brown, but we chose blue"; etc. Verbs that require this are called transitive.
  • The Indirect Object (or COi) is the second object for the clauses that have two, such as "she gave him (1) a book (2)"; "the mother sang her baby (1) a lullaby (2)"; "tell me (1) a story (2)". These are different to Direct Objects: we don't 'sing a baby' in the same way that we 'sing a song'. All the Objects marked (1) in these examples can be replaced by a Preposition Phrase with 'to' or 'for' ("she gave a book to him"; "the mother sang a lullaby to her baby"; "tell a story to me").

Some verbs - Intransitive verbs - do not have Objects. These are verbs such as 'to go', 'to come' and most verbs of motion, as well as other verbs. They are verbs which talk of actions that the Subject does, but does not do to anyone or anything. Examples: "I'm going"; "she was talking"; "the dog barked"; etc.