Ellipses in English
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Ellipsis
in English
What is ellipsis?
SOMETHING
UNDERSTOOD,
‘undertood’ in the special sense of ‘going without saying’ (obvious).
We are
referring to clauses and sentences ,etc. whose structure is
such as to
presuppose some
preceding
item, which then serves as the source of the missing
information.
An
elliptical item is one which leaves specific structural slots to
be filled
from elsewhere.
Example: Joan brought
some carnations ,and Cathrine (E) some sweet peas.
Ellipsis , Substitution ,and Reference
n Halliday& Hassan define ellipses in relation to another important cohesive
device,
i.e. substitution, since
they embody
the same fundamental relation between parts of the text. Ellipsis is
substitution
by zero.
a. This is
a fine hall you have here. I’m proud to be lecturing in it (R).
b. This is
a fine hall you have here. I've never lectured in a finer one (S).
c. This is
a fine hall you have here. I've never lectured in a finer (E).
Types of Ellipsis
1- Nominal
Ellipsis
2- Verbal
Ellipsis
3- Clausal
Ellipsis
Nominal Ellipsis 1
Nominal
ellipsis means "the omission of a noun head“ in a
nominal group.
He bought a red car, but I
like the blue.
Nominal
Ellipsis 2
Nominal ellipsis is when Head
is omitted and its function is taken on by one of
these modifiers. Therefore,
it involves the upgrading
of a word function
not Head from the status of
Modifier to the status of Head.
Which hat will you wear?
a- the best (E)
b- the best hat (no E)
c- the best of the hats (no E)
d- the best of the three (E)
e- the best you have (E)
Nominal Ellipsis: Deictics
There are three types of
Deictics:
Specific deictics
Non-specific deictics
Post-deictics
Nominal Ellipsis: Specific
Deictics
1- Possessives (Smith’s, my father’s, my,
your, mine, hers,…)
Just ask
Janet how to polish the brassware. Hers sparkles.
2- Demonstratives (this, that, these, those)
3- The
The itself does not operate
elliptically, since its function is to signal that the thing designated is fully defined, but by
something other than the itself, it normally requires
another item with it as in
the two , the small, etc.
- Take these pills three times
daily. And you’d better have some more of those too.
- The one that got away.
- Which one is your father?—the
taller
Nominal Ellipsis:
Non-Specific Deictics
Each ,
every, any, either , no, neither, a, some , all , and both
Of these, all occur as Head
of an elliptical nominal except every, but a, and no have to be represented
by the forms one and none ,respectively.
a. I hope no bones are broken
?-None to speak of.
b. I won't be introduced to
the pudding, please. May I give you some?
c. Have some milk.- I don't
see any milk- There isn't any.
d. Write an essay on the
Stuart kings. Two pages about each will do.
e. His sons went into
business. Neither succeeded.
Nominal Ellipsis:
Post-Deictics
Post-deictics are not
determiners but adjectives. These are
some thirty to forty adjectives used commonly in deictic function: other
,same ,different, identical, usual, regular, certain, odd, famous,
well-known,
typical, obvious ,etc.
I ‘ve used up these three
folders you gave me. Can I use
the other?
I ‘ll have the usual, please.
A group of well-dressed young
men suddenly appeared on
the stage. One of them bowed to the
audience; the others stood motionless.
Nominal Ellipsis:Numeratives
The
Numerative element in the nominal group is expressed by
numerals or other quantifying words, which form three subcategories:
1-ordinals (first, next, last, second
,fourth ,…)
2-
cardinals (the three, these
three, any three, all three,the usual three, the same three,…)
3-
indefinite quantifiers (much ,many, more, most, few, several, a little, lots, a
bit, hundreds,..)
Have another chocolate?- No
thanks; that was my third.
Have another chocolate?- No
thanks;I’ve had my three.
Can all cats climb trees?-
They all can ;and most do.
'You ought to have a wooden
horse on wheels., that you ought !. – ‘ I’ll get one’: the Knight said thoughtfully
tohimself . ‘One or two - several.’
‘One side will make you grow
taller,and the other side will make you grow shorter.’ ‘One side of what?The other side of
what? Thought Alice to
herself. ‘Of the mushroom,’ said the Caterpiler,just as if she had asked it aloud.
Nominal Ellipsis: Epithets
The
function of Epithet is typically fulfilled by an adjective .It is
not common
to find adjectives occurring as Head in ellipsis:
1- colour
adjectives
Green suits you very well.
2-
opposites
I like strong tea. I suppose
weak is better for you.
3-Attribute
The rich , the poor, the
honest
4-comparative
I’ll buy you some prettier.
Mary is the cleverer.
5-
superlative
They are fine actors. Jones
always gets hold of the finest.
Verbal Ellipsis
An
elliptical verbal group presupposes one or more words from
a previous verbal group. Technically, it is defined as
a verbal group whose structure does not fully express its systemic features:
1-
finiteness (finite or non-finite)
2-
polarity :positive or negative
3- voice
:active or passive
4- tense:
past or present or future
a-Have you been swimming? –
Yes, I have.
b- What have you been doing?-
swimming
The
elliptical swimming has the features of finite, positive,
active, present in past, past in present but none of these
selections is shown in its own structure. They have
to be recovered by presupposition. A verb group (have been swimming) whose
structure fully
represents all its systematic features is not elliptical.
Verbal Ellipsis: Lexical
Ellipsis
Lexical
ellipsis is that type in which the lexical verb is missing
from the verbal group. Thus, any verbal group not containing a lexical verb is
elliptical. Any verbal
group consisting of a modal or an operator only can
immediately be recognized as elliptical:
- Is John going to come?- He
might. He was to, but he may not, - He should, if he wants his name to be
considered.
Be, have, and do can be
elliptical and substitutes (non-elliptical):
-Did Jane
know?-No, but Mary did (no E).
- Did Jane
know?- Yes ,she did (E).
Here, the
distinction between elliptical and non-elliptical forms has
to be recovered from the presupposed clause ,since did is a
lexical verb replaced by knew in the first sentence ,while an operator in
the latter.
Verbal Ellipsis: Operator
Ellipsis
It
involves only the omission of operators; the lexical verb
always remains intact, and the subject is always omitted
from the clause; it must therefore be presupposed:
a. What
have you been doing?
b.
swimming.
This
constitutes the first type of operator ellipsis: sequences
such as questions and answers, in which the lexical verb either supplies the
answer to ‘do what?’
as in the above example , or repudiates the verb in
the question:
Has she
been crying?- No, laughing .
The other
type is in coordination:
- Some
were laughing and others crying.
Clausal Ellipsis
The clause has two-part
structure consisting of modal and proposition:
The Duke was going to plant a row of
poplars in the park
Modal Proposition
In the park the Duke was going to plant a row of
poplars .
A row of poplars the Duke was going to plant in the park.
The bold elements are the
modals.
Clausal Ellipsis
Clausal ellipsis represents
the omission of a part of
the clause or all of it. For example,
the subject pronoun element is frequently omitted specially in spoken
texts. Such ellipsis is
often associated with questions and responses in dialogues. It is similar to
the verbal ellipsis except that
clausal ellipsis is external to the verb itself, affecting other elements in the
structure of the
clause.
Typically
,modal ellipsis occurs in
responses to a Wh-
questions ‘what (did, does, do):
a. What were they doing?-
Holding hands.
The usual
type of non-finite dependent clause is simply a clause
with modal ellipsis
Typically,
propositional ellipsis occurs in responses to
statements and yes/no questions, where the subject is
presupposed by a reference item:
a. The plane has landed.—Has
it?
b. Has the plane landed?—Yes,
it has.
Clausal Ellipsis: No ellipsis
of single elements
It is not possible in English
to say:
*Has she taken her
medicine?-She has taken.
Either we must reply with a
full ,nonelliptical clause, or we must omit both ‘her medicine’ and the
lexical verb ‘take’, or ‘do’
as substitution:
She has taken her medicine.
Or She has. Or
She has done (S).
Clausal Ellipsis:
QuestionAnswer
The ‘question-answer’
sequence is a standard pattern in language, and the cohesive relation
between them has its own
characteristic grammatical
properties. An observation by a
speaker may be followed by an observation by another speaker that is related to it
in a cohesive tie. This is
called rejoinder.
A rejoinder can be direct
response or indirect
response.
A direct response as in
yes/no question and wh questions.
Has John arrived? –Yes , he
has.
When did John arrive?-
Yesterday.
Clausal Ellipsis:
QuestionAnswer
An indirect response can be:
1- one which comments on the
question (commentary):
- How did they break in?
–I’ll show you how.
- Is it Tuesday today? – I
don’t know.
2- one which denies its
relevance (disclaimer):
- Why didn’t you tell John? –
I did.
- When did they cancel the
booking?- Did they?
3-one which gives
supplementary information implying but not actually expressing an answer
(supplementary):
-Did you tell John?- He
wasn’t there.
-Are you coming back today?-
This evening
This type found in indirect
whquestions, indirect yes/no questions, and indirect statements:
- The jewels are missing.– I
wonder what else.
- Who could have broken those
tiles?- I can’t think who.
- John was disappointed by
the response.—You can ask him.
- She might be better living
away from home. –I’m not sure.
- I wonder if it’ll rain on
the day of the picnic.- Probably.
- England won the cup. –Who
told you?
- I think the cheque is still
valid.—The bank can tell them.
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