Module 5. Structural and
functional grammar
Lesson 27
AGREEMENT OF VERB WITH THE SUBJECT: TENSE, MOOD, VOICE
27.1
Introduction
A Verb
is a word that tells or asserts something about a person or thing.
·
A Transitive Verb is a verb that denotes an action which passes over
from the doer or subject to an object. e.g.
The boy kicks the football.
·
An Intransitive Verb is a verb that denotes an action which does not
pass over to an object or expresses a state or being. e.g.
He ran a long distance. (Action)
The baby sleeps. (State)
There is a flaw in this method. (Being)
27.2
Linking Verbs
Most
verbs assert action, but a few express a static condition or state of being (no
action). Most of these inactive verbs are called Linking Verbs.
· The
most common linking verb is to be, in its various forms of
number, person, tense and mood.
· Other
common linking verbs are appear, become, feel, grow, look, prove, remain,
seem, smell, sound, stand, taste, turn.
· When
these verbs are followed by nouns or pronouns as direct objects, they are not
linking verbs, but imply or express action. They are linking verbs if you can
substitute some form of to be for them.
The sky looks cloudy this
morning. (Linking Verb)
Ram looks at Mohan as if he
hates him. (Action Verb)
The tea tasted too sweet.
(Linking Verb)
The girl cautiously tasted
the drink. (Action Verb)
27.3 Auxiliary Verbs
An auxiliary verb helps out
a main verb. An auxiliary verb has little meaning of its own; rather it changes
the meaning of the main verb.
Ganesh has left the
city.
The machine
will be sent this afternoon.
As we were
leaving, we were stopped by a policeman.
Among all the auxiliary
verbs, particular care should be taken to use the following correctly:
shall and will
should and would
27.3.1 Shall and will
Many writers still have
strong convictions that the only correct way to express the simple future
in formal writing is:
I shall do
it. We shall do
it.
You will do
it. You will do it.
He will do
it. They will do it.
a)
and that strong determination can only be
expressed through:
I will do
it. We will
do it.
You shall do
it. You shall
do it.
He shall do
it. They shall do it.
Though this distinction
is not strictly observed, it is best to follow it.
b) should and would:
Should chiefly implies obligation in the sense
of ought to; and would expresses a customary action with all three persons:
I should urge you to take action fast. (ought
to)
You should do everything to protect your reputation. (ought
to)
Everyday he would answer his
letters as soon as he finished reading the mail. (habitual
action)
I would always advise a careful revision before signing. (habitual
action)
27.4 Verbs: Tense, Mood
and Voice
The form of a verb or verb phrase tells
us three things about the action or state it names.
·
It tells us what time the action occurs (tense)
·
What the attitude of speaker or writer is
(mood)
·
Whether the subject is performing the action
or receiving it (voice).
27.5
Tense
Tense
is the time of the action or state expressed by the verb. The three divisions
of time – past, present, future – are shown in English by six tenses. The three
primary or simple tenses are the present tense, the past
tense, and the future tense. The three perfect (or secondary) tenses
are the present perfect, the past perfect, and the future
perfect.
Present
I play (I am playing)
Past
I played (was playing)
Future
I shall play (shall be playing)
Present Perfect
I have played (have been playing)
Past Perfect I
had played (had been playing)
Future Perfect
I shall have played (shall have been playing)
a]
Present Tense:
It indicates that the
action or condition is going on or exists now:
He takes exercise every
morning.
The letters are posted.
b]
Past Tense
It
indicates that an action or condition took place or existed at some definite
time in the past.
Yesterday I attended the meeting.
They were married on Saturday.
c]
Future Tense
It
indicates that the action will take place or that a condition will exist in the
future.
We shall move to Bangalore next week.
The train will leave at midnight.
The
future may be stated by present tense accompanied by an adverb (or adverbial
phrase) indicating time:
I am going to stop later on today.
Our trip begins tomorrow.
d] Present Perfect Tense
It
indicates that an action or condition was begun in the past and has just been
completed or is still going on. The time is past but it is connected with the present.
The present perfect tense presupposes some relationship with the present:
We have lived in Bombay for fifteen years.
The water has been too cold for swimming.
e]
Past Perfect Tense
It
indicates that an action or a condition was completed at a time now past. It
indicates action “two steps back”. That is, the past perfect tense presupposes
some relationship with an action or a condition expressed in the past tense:
The college campus was crowded because new students had joined.
She
was employed by Tata Steels Company. She had worked there for five months.
f]
Future Perfect Tense
It
indicates that an action or a condition will be completed at a future time:
By the time you arrive, I shall have finished my work.
27.6
Proper Use of Tenses
a]
Simple Present Tense
i)
Use the simple present tense to express general truths or accepted facts
and to indicate habitual action. Use the present tense in critical
writing about literature and the other arts.
GENERAL
TRUTHS All that
glitters is not gold.
The sun rises in the east.
HABITUAL
ACTION The old man exercises
daily.
The bank closes at four o’clock.
He takes milk every morning.
CRITICAL WRITING In Dickens’ novel David Copperfield,
David’s harsh stepfather sends him to London where every day David works
in a warehouse pasting labels on bottles.
Jane
Austen’s use of ironic comment is highly effective.
ii) In exclamatory sentences
beginning with here and there to express what is actually taking
place in the present.
Here
comes the bus!
There she goes!
iii) To indicate a future event that is
part of a plan or arrangement.
We
go to Bombay next week.
When does the college reopen?
iv) It is
used, instead of the Simple Future Tense, in clauses of time and condition.
I shall wait till you finish your
lunch.
If it rains we shall get wet.
b]
Present Continuous Tense
Use the present continuous
(i) For
an action happening at the time of speaking.
It is raining.
She is singing (now).
Why are you sitting at my
desk?
(ii) For
an action happening about this time, but not necessarily at the time of
speaking.
He is teaching French and learning Greek.
I am reading Oliver Twist (but I am not
reading at this moment).
(iii) For
an action that is planned or arranged to take place in the near future.
I am going to the cinema tonight.
My uncle is arriving tomorrow.
(iv) With always,
continually, constantly for a frequently repeated action or for a
particular obstinate habit- something which persists, we use present continuous
tense.
He is always losing his keys.
He is continually working.
I am constantly making that mistake.
v) The following verbs, on account of their
meaning, are not always used in the
continuous form:
Verbs of perception: see,
hear smell, notice, recognize
Verbs of appearing: appear,
look, seem
Verbs of emotion: want,
wish, desire, feel, like, love, hate, hope, refuse,
prefer
Verbs
of thinking: think, suppose, believe, agree,
consider, trust, remember, forget, know, understand, imagine, mean, mind
Have (possess): own,
possess, belong to, contain, consist of
These
verbs are used in the simple present. They may, however, be used in the
continuous tenses with a change of meaning:
I am thinking of (considering the idea of)
going to Canada.
c] Present Perfect Tense
(i)
Use the Present Perfect Tense to indicate completed activities in the immediate
past.
He
has just gone out.
It has just struck
eleven.
(ii) To
express past actions whose time is not given and not definite.
I
have never known him to be so foolish.
Have you read Gitanjali by Rabindra Nath Tagore?
(iii) To describe past
events when you think more of their effect in the present than of the action
itself.
I have finished my work (now I am
free).
I have cut my finger ( and
it is bleeding now).
(iv) To
denote an action beginning at some time in the past and continuing up to the
present moment.
I have known him for a long time.
She has been ill since last week.
(v) The
following adverbs (or adverb phrases) can be used with the present perfect
tense: just, often, never, ever
(in questions only), so far, till now, yet (in negatives and questions),
already, since-phrases, for-phrases, today, this week, this month, etc.
So far this month I have sold three hundred
and fifty books.
The Bombay office has corresponded with him
ever since the accident.
We
read your comments with great interest, but lack of information has prevented a
complete reply until today.
d] Present Perfect Continuous Tense
(i)
The Present Perfect Continuous Tense is used for an action which began at some
time in the past and is still continuing.
They have been building the building
for several months.
They have been playing since morning.
e] Simple Past Tense
(i) The Simple Past Tense is used to indicate an
action completed in the past. It often occurs with adverbs or
adverb phrases of past time.
She attended
the meeting yesterday.
She left
the school last year.
(ii) The
Simple Past Tense is also used for past habits.
He always carried an umbrella.
He studied many hours a day.
f] Past Continuous Tense
(i)
The Past Continuous Tense is used to denote an action going on at some time in
the past. The time of action may or may not be indicated.
We were listening to the music all
evening.
The light went out while I was reading.
(ii) The
Past Continuous Tense is also used, with always, continually etc., for
persistent habits in the past.
He was always grumbling.
g] Past Perfect Tense
(i) The Past Perfect Tense is used to express an
action completed before a certain moment in the past.
At
9 pm, I had finished my home work.
I had already known the result
when he rang me up.
(ii)
The Past Perfect Tense is used to express an action in the past which
was completed before another action, also in the past.
The doctor had left
when I reached there.
The thieves had
escaped by the time the police arrived.
(iii) When
two Simple Past Tenses might give the impression that the two actions happened
simultaneously, the Past Perfect Tense is used after ‘when’.
When she had
recited her poem, she sat down.
(iv) The
Past Perfect Tense is used to express unfulfilled desires of the past.
I wish he
hadn’t gone. (but he went)
I would rather you had come alone. (but you did not)
(v) The Past Perfect Tense is used to express
impossible (unfulfilled) condition.
If you had worked hard, you would have
passed.
h] Past Perfect Continuous Tense
(i) The Past
Perfect Continuous Tense is used for an action that began before a certain
point in the past and continued up to that time or stopped just before it.
At
that time he had been writing a novel for two months.
(ii) The Past Perfect Continuous Tense is used
to express a single action which occupied a period of time in the past.
He had been washing his car for the last fifteen
minutes.
i] Simple Future Tense
(i) The Simple
Future Tense is used to express an action that is still to take place, with or
without expression of time.
I
shall see you tomorrow.
They will help us.
Note: The simple future Tense generally expresses
pure or colorless future. When the future is coloured
with intention, going to + infinitive construction is preferred, e.g. He
is going to build a new house.
j]
Future Continuous Tense
(i) The Future
Continuous Tense represents an action as going on at some time in future time.
I
shall be reading the paper then.
(ii) The Future Continuous Tense is also used
for future events that are planned.
I
shall be staying here till Wednesday.
He will be meeting us
next week.
k] Future Perfect Tense
(i) The Future
Perfect Tense is used to indicate the completion of an action by certain future
time.
I shall have written the project by
that time.
L] Future Perfect Continuous Tense
(i) The Future
Perfect Continuous Tense indicates an action represented as being in progress
over a period of time that will end in the future.
By next December we
shall have been living here for eight years.
27.7 Mood
Verbs appear in
three moods: Indicative, Imperative and Subjunctive.
·
Indicative is the mood of actuality. We use this about ninety-nine
percent of the time. It is used for ordinary statements and questions (He is
happy, Is he happy?)
·
Imperative mood is the mood of making commands or requests. (Be happy.)
·
This subjunctive is the mood of
unreality and is used to expresses conditions contrary to fact and high
desirability (If he were happy). Subjunctive mood needs to be carefully
handled.
a]
Use the subjunctive to express conditions contrary to fact.
Reeta
could settle the argument if she were here. [But she isn’t here.]
If
the rose bush were healthy, it would have more buds. [The bush is not
healthy.]
Last year, the bush
looked as though it were going to die. [But it didn’t die.]
Note
that all clauses beginning with if automatically express a condition
contrary to fact.
If I were you, I’d refuse to let him use my office.
If I were you, I would call on him again.
b]
Use the subjunctive were after as though,
as if and even if to express doubt or uncertainty:
He talks as if he were the only intelligent person in the group.
She looked as though she were completely exhausted.
Even if that were to happen, we have substantial reserves to draw upon.
c] As
an auxiliary form (that is, part of other verbs), be is used after verbs
like ask, urge, insist, require, vote, move etc.
He moved that the meeting be adjourned.
I, therefore, urge that this be reconsidered.
We must insist that this payment be made in three days.
He insisted that he be given one more chance.
27.8 Voice
Voice refers to
the ability of transitive verbs to show whether the subject performs or
receives the action named by the verb.
When the subject
performs the action, the verb is in the active voice. When it receives
the action, the verb is in the passive voice.
ACTIVE
Mohan wrote a letter.
The poison drove its
victim mad.
PASSIVE
A letter was written by Mohan
The victim was driven
mad by the poison.
Only transitive
verbs, that is, verbs that can take an object, can show both active and
passive voices. We can say: The student wrote the paper or The paper was written by the student, but only
He talked, not He was talked.
Most sentences
in writing use verbs in the active voice, which is almost always more direct, more economical, and more forceful than the passive.
1
Use the passive when the actor is not known. Consider
the following:
His proposal was rejected.
The play was first performed in sixteen century.
2 Use the passive
when the receiver of the action is more important than the actor. Consider
the following:
The
new bridge was completed in April.
A new video film was prepared.