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Subject and Predicative Clauses
r ine. (J. AUSTEN) Each of the two complex sentences making up this passage has a subject clause, and indeed the second one has two of them. It is characteristic of this type that the subject clauses have (two out of the three) the group
"should + infinitive"
as their predicate, and that the predicates of the two main clauses contain adjectives expressing assessment
(strange and
wonderful).
The reason for calling these clauses subject clauses would seem to be clear: if the clause is dropped, the subject is missing. Since in the sentences as they are the position which might be occupied by a noun-subject is occupied by a subordinate clause, this seems to be sufficient reason for terming the clause a subject clause.
Things are somewhat more difficult and controversial in sentences like the following:
It had seemed certain that their meeting was fortunate. (R. WEST) Here the main clause has the pronoun
it (in its impersonal use) occupying the position assigned to the subject of the sentence, and after the main clause comes a subordinate clause whose syntactical function we are to consider now. Two views appear to be possible here. One of them is that the pronoun
it at the beginning of the main clause is only a "formal subject", or, as it is sometimes termed, a "sham subject", whereas the subordinate clause coming after the main one is the real subject.
The other view is, that the position of the subject is occupied by the pronoun
it, and, whether "formal" or not, it is the subject of the sentence, so that no room is left for any other subject.. If this view is accepted, the clause will have to be some other kind of clause, not a subject clause. The best way of treating it in that case would be to take it as a kind of appositional clause referring to the subject of the main clause, namely the pronoun
it.
The choice of either alternative must necessarily remain a matter of subjective decision, as no objective proof in favour of the one or the other view seems possible. The situation so far is the same as with
some types of simple sentences, where the choice was between, taking a certain part as a "real" subject as distinct from the "formal" one, or as an apposition to it. We would definitely prefer the second view and we will therefore discuss this type of subordinate clauses when we come to appositional clauses (see p. 303).
PREDICATIVE CLAUSES
By predicative clauses we mean clauses like those in the following sentences.
This was exactly what she had expected him to say and for the first time she did not go closer and squeeze his hand intimately. (E. CALDWELL)
"The only comforting feature of the whole business," he said, "is that we didn't pay for our dinner." (LINKLATER) The following example is instructive:
It seemed as if a good view were no longer to be taken from the top of a high hill