Lavarenn : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

Endalc’h diverket Danvez ouzhpennet
Neal (kaozeal | degasadennoù)
lañs
 
Neal (kaozeal | degasadennoù)
DDiverradenn ebet eus ar c'hemm
Linenn 3:
Er [[yezhoniezh]] e vez implijet an termen '''islavarenn''' ([[saozneg|saoz.]]: [[:en:|''clause'']]) evit komz eus
 
In [[grammar]], a '''clause''' is a word or group of words ordinarily consisting of a [[subject (grammar)|subject]] and a [[predicate (grammar)|predicate]], although in some [[language]]s and some types of clauses, the subject may not appear explicitly. (This is especially common in [[null subject language]]s.) The most basic kind of [[sentence (linguistics)|sentence]] consists of a single clause; more complicated sentences may contain multiple clauses. Indeed, it is possible for one clause to contain another.
 
The most basic kind of [[sentence (linguistics)|sentence]] consists of a single clause; more complicated sentences may contain multiple clauses.
Clauses are often contrasted with ''[[phrase]]s''. Traditionally, a ''clause'' was said to have both a [[finite verb]] and its subject, whereas a ''phrase'' either contained a finite verb but not its subject (in which case it is a ''[[verb phrase]]'') or did not contain a finite verb. Hence, "I didn't know that the dog ran through the yard", "that the dog ran through the yard" is a clause, as is the sentence as a whole, while "the yard", "through the yard", "ran through the yard", and "the dog" are all phrases. Modern linguists do not draw quite the same distinction, however, the main difference being that modern linguists accept the idea of a ''[[non-finite clause]]'', a clause that is organized around a [[non-finite verb]].
 
Clauses are often contrasted with ''[[phrase]]s''. Traditionally, a ''clause'' was said to have both a [[finite verb]] and its subject, whereas a ''phrase'' either contained a finite verb but not its subject (in which case it is a ''[[verb phrase]]'') or did not contain a finite verb, da sjkouer:
==Dependent and independent clauses==
 
"I didn't know that the dog ran through the yard", "that the dog ran through the yard" is a clause, as is the sentence as a whole, while "the yard", "through the yard", "ran through the yard", and "the dog" are all phrases.
 
Modern linguists do not draw quite the same distinction, however, the main difference being that modern linguists accept the idea of a ''[[non-finite clause]]'', a clause that is organized around a [[non-finite verb]].
 
Clauses are typically classified as either [[Dependent clause|dependent]] or [[Independent clause|independent]]. An ''independent clause'' can stand alone as a complete [[simple sentence]], whereas a ''dependent clause'' must be connected to or part of another clause. The dependent clause is then described as ''subordinate'' to a ''main clause'', or (if it is part of a larger clause) as ''embedded'' in a ''matrix clause''.
Linenn 18 ⟶ 22:
*"me to go to the store" (''dependent''; ''non-finite''), as in "He wanted me to go to the store."
*"that I went to" (''dependent''), as in "That's the store that I went to."
 
==Functions of dependent clauses==
 
One major way to classify dependent clauses is by ''function''; that is, by the roles they play in the clauses they are subordinate to. Since the same dependent clause might have different roles in different sentences, this classification must be applied on a per-sentence basis.
 
Under this classification scheme, there are three main types of dependent clauses: ''noun clauses'', ''adjective clauses'', and ''adverb clauses'', so called for their syntactic and semantic resemblance to [[noun phrase]]s, [[adjective phrase]]s, and [[adverbial]]s, respectively. The exact uses of each vary somewhat from language to language, but a ''noun clause'' typically acts as the [[subject (grammar)|subject]] of a verb or as the [[object (grammar)|object]] of a verb or preposition, as in these English examples:
 
*"'''What you say''' is not as important as '''how you say it'''."
*"I imagine '''that they're having a good time'''."
*"I keep thinking about '''what happened yesterday'''."
 
(Incidentally, note that the word ''that'' is actually optional in the second sentence, highlighting a complication in the entire dependent/independent contrast: "They're having a good time" is a complete sentence, and therefore an independent clause, but in "I imagine they're having a good time", it acts as a dependent clause.)
 
An ''adjective clause'' modifies a noun phrase. In English, adjective clauses typically come at the end of their noun phrases:
 
*"The woman '''I spoke to''' said otherwise."
*"We have to consider the possibility '''that he's lying to us'''."
 
An ''adverb clause'' typically modifies its entire main clause. In English, it usually precedes or follows its main clause:
 
*"'''When she gets here''', all will be explained."
*"He was annoyed by the whole thing, '''which was unfortunate, but unavoidable'''."
 
Nonetheless, sometimes the line between categories is blurry, and in some languages it can be difficult to apply these classifications at all. Sometimes, more than one interpretation is possible, as in the English sentence "We saw a movie, after which we went dancing", where "after which we went dancing" can be seen either an adjective clause ("We saw a movie. After the movie, we went dancing.") or as an adverb clause ("We saw a movie. After we saw the movie, we went dancing."). More complicated, sometimes the two interpretations are not synonymous, but both are intended, as in "Let me know when you're ready", where "when you're ready" functions both as a noun clause (the object of ''know'', identifying what knowledge is to be conveyed) and as an adverb clause (specifying when the knowledge is to be conveyed).
 
== Gwelit ivez: ==
==Structures of dependent clauses==
 
The other major way to classify dependent clauses is by their ''structure'', though even this classification scheme does make some reference to the clause's function in a sentence. This scheme is more complex, as there are many different ways that a dependent clause can be structured. In English, common structures include:
 
*Many dependent clauses, such as "before he comes" or "because they agreed", consist of a [[preposition]]-like [[subordinating conjunction]], plus what would otherwise be an independent clause. These clauses act much like [[prepositional phrase]]s, and are either adjective clauses or adverb clauses, with many being able to function in either capacity.
*[[Relative clause]]s, such as "which I couldn't see", generally consist of a [[relative pronoun]], plus a clause in which the relative pronoun plays a part. Relative clauses usually function as adjective clauses, but occasionally they function as adverb clauses; in either case, they modify their relative pronoun's antecedent, and follow the phrase or clause that they modify.
*Fused relative clauses, such as "what she did" (in the sense of "the thing she did"), are like ordinary relative clauses except that they act as noun clauses; they incorporate their subjects into their relative pronouns.
*Declarative [[content clause]]s, such as "that they came", usually consist of the conjunction ''that'' plus what would otherwise be an independent clause, or of an independent clause alone (with an implicit preceding ''that''). For this reason, they are often called ''that clauses''. Declarative content clauses refer to states of affairs; it is often implied that the state of affairs is the case, as in "It is fortunate that they came", but this implication is easily removed by the context, as in "It is doubtful that they came."
*Interrogative content clauses, such as "whether they came" and "where he went" (as in "I don't know where he went"), are much like declarative ones, except that they are introduced by [[interrogative word]]s. Rather than referring to a state of affairs, they refer to an unknown element of a state of affairs, such as one of the participants (as in "I wonder who came") or even the truth of the state (as in "I wonder whether he came").
*[[Small clause]]s, such as "him leave" (as in "I saw him leave") and "him to leave" (as in "I wanted him to leave"), are minimal predicate structures, consisting only of an object and an additional structure (usually an [[infinitive]]), with the latter being predicated to the former by a controlling verb or preposition.
 
== See also ==
* [[Islavarenn stag]]
* [[Islavarenn emren]]