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Adverbial Clauses
T here has been some discussion whether the word
where introducing a subordinate clause of place is an adverb or a conjunction. The latter view was suggested by a certain
analogy with the conjunction when introducing clauses of time. However, the possibility of the word
where being preceded by the preposition
from, as in some of the above examples, is a definite argument against its being a conjunction.
The number of sentences with an adverbial clause of place is negligible as compared with those containing an adverbial clause of time. The cause of this is plain enough. It is only in exceptional cases that the speaker or writer deems it necessary to denote the place of an action by referring to another action which occurred at the same place. In the vast majority of cases he will rather indicate the place by directly naming it
(at home, in London, at the nearest shop, and so forth). Sentences with adverbial clauses of place are therefore used only in cases where the speaker or writer avoids naming the place of the action, or in sentences of a generalising character, or again in sentences where the place is perhaps hard to define and the name is unimportant.
Clauses of place can also be used in a metaphorical sense, that is, the "place" indicated may not be a place at all in the literal meaning of the word but a certain generalised condition or sphere of action. This of course is made clear by the context, that is, by the lexical meanings of the other words in the sentence. Compare the following sentences.
Where people wish to attach, they should always be ignorant. (J. AUSTEN)
Wherever the choice has had to be made between the man of reason and the madman, the world has unhesitatingly followed the madman. (DURRELL) Both the adverb
wherever and the meaning of the sentence as a whole show that not a concrete place but a general review of conditions is meant.
Two very well known sentences are also cases in point: the proverb
Where there is a will there is a way and the famous line from Thomas Gray's poem "On a Distant Prospect of Eton College":
Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise.
It is of no special importance whether we shall term such clauses of metaphorical meaning clauses of place or invent a new term to denote them. Anyway, there would seem to be no basic objection to give them that name, provided we keep in mind that spatial notions are apt to be interpreted metaphorically.
Clauses of Time (Temporal Clauses)
The number of conjunctions used to introduce temporal clauses is very considerable, and it seems to be growing still at the ex-