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Object Clauses and Attributive Clauses
a language do not require any special case and may be followed by practically any kind of word, including a conjunction.
The specific qualities of an object clause as distinct from an object in a simple sentence are not difficult to state.
An object clause (clauses of indirect speech included) is necessary when the notion to be expressed cannot conveniently be summed up in a noun, or a phrase with a noun as its head word, or a gerund and a gerundial phrase, but requires an explicit predicative unit, that is, a subject and a predicate of its own. Or, to put it in a different way: an object clause is necessary when what is to be added to the predicate verb is
the description of a situation, rather than a mere name of a thing.
In some cases, though, an object in a simple sentence may have a synonymous object clause, as in the following cases
: I heard of his arrival — I heard that he had arrived, etc. The meaning of the two sentences in each case is exactly the same, but there is a certain stylistic difference: the simple sentence with the prepositional object sounds rather more literary or even bookish than the complex sentence
with the object clause, which is fit for any sort of style.
A peculiar case of a prepositional object clause is seen in this sentence:
George had drunk a. cup of coffee with himself and Simon that morning, had told them of a play he planned to write, then, on to the subject of his weekend, all that he had seen, a good amount of what he had thought or wanted people to think that he had thought, and to the description of a, young man named Steitler. (BUECHNER) The noun
amount is head word to a prepositional clause, with two homogeneous predicates,
had thought, and
wanted; with the second of these predicates there is the complex object
people to think, and the infinitive
to think is
head word to an object clause,
that he had thought. Now this
had thought in the object clause is understood to have as its object the pronoun
what which immediately follows the words
amount of. Thus, the word
what, while being part of the first-degree subordinate clause, is object to the predicate of the second-degree clause.
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