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Object Clauses and Attributive Clauses
o wn opinion of the relative value of the arguments brought forward in favour of this or that view.
Occasionally an object clause may come before the main clause: ..
.whatever courtesy I have shown to Mrs Hurtle in England I have been constrained to show her. (TROLLOPE) In this example the object clause, which of course
depends on the predicate have been constrained to show of the head clause, comes first. This is a clear indication that the object clause represents the theme of the sentence, whereas the rheme is represented by the head clause, and the most important element in this rheme is of course the word
constrained. In fact the essential meaning of the sentence might have been put briefly in these words:
My courtesy to Mrs Hurtle was constrained. In that case the theme would be represented by the subject group, and the rheme by the predicate.
In
speaking of object clauses, special attention must be paid to clauses introduced by prepositions. These clauses may be termed prepositional object clauses, on the analogy of prepositional objects in a simple sentence.
We must note that a prepositional object in a simple sentence does not always correspond to a prepositional object clause: for instance, the verb
insist, which always
combines with the preposition on (or
upon) in a simple sentence, never has this preposition when followed by an object clause.
Most verbs, however, which combine with a preposition in a simple sentence, do so in a complex sentence as well: a case in point is the verb
depend, which always combines with the preposition
on (or
upon), no matter what follows: compare
It depends on what you will say, It depends on whether you will come. Here are some examples:
The conversation was as brief and uncomplicated as that, freed from whatever implication the memory of their earlier encounter might have added to it. (BUECHNER) This is a peculiarly English way of putting it, and it appears to be more idiomatic than the other way, which, however, is also possible, namely,
The conversation was as brief and uncomplicated as that, freed from any implication that the memory of their earlier encounter might have added to it.
The following example is very illuminating since a prepositional clause going with the verb
think is then followed by prepositional objects within the main clause:
He thought for a few minutes of what she had said —
of Arthur's rottenness —
socially and personally —
and of all that they stood for —
individually alive, socially progressive. (A. WILSON) As the prepositional clause
of what she had said stands on the same syntactic level
as the prepositional phrases of Arthur's rottenness and
of all that they stood for (the latter including an attributive subordinate clause), it is quite clear that their functions are identical, that is, the clause is an object clause.