CHAPTER VI
THE ANALYSIS OF SIMPLE, PARTIALLY COMPOUND,
AND COMPLEX SENTENCES
1. Study the sentence as to number and kind of propositions, to determine whether it is simple, partially compound, or complex. Determine also whether it is declarative, interrogative, or imperative. Name it according to both structure and form. If it has been rendered exclamative, state that fact.
2. If the sentence is simple, separate it into its two parts, subject and predicate.
3. Analyze the subject; that is, separate it into the substantive used as base-word and the adjuncts of that substantive.
4. Analyze the predicate; that is, separate it into predicate verb, complement, and modifiers (provided the verb has these adjuncts).
5. If the complement is complex, analyze it by separating it into base-word and modifiers.
Note.—Do not talk about “complete subject” and “simple subject,” neither “logical predicate” and “grammatical predicate.” The subject is the subject; the predicate is the predicate. That ends it.
6. If the sentence is complex, containing an adjective clause, proceed the same as in the analysis of simple sentences, analyzing the clause last.
7. When the clause is given as an adjunct of some noun, state whether it is restrictive or unrestrictive, and give its introductory word.
8. If any subject or predicate is partially compound, state that fact before analyzing it.
Always proceed logically. In analyzing the sentence, “The city editor laid a clipping from the morning paper on the desk,” do not say that from the morning paper is a phrase modifying clipping. Say instead that clipping is modified by the prepositional phrase from the morning paper. In other words, get new elements by reaching out from elements that you already have.
Always proceed from the whole to the part. Do not say that laid is completed by the object clipping, for that is only part of the object. The object is a clipping from the morning paper. After giving this as a unit, or whole, separate it into base-word and modifiers.
Do not analyze a simple prepositional phrase like on the desk. It is a waste of time. If the phrase is complex, that is, contains a phrase, like from the morning paper of July first, it should be analyzed.
Model for Analysis
The Merced Yosemite was created by the action of five immense glaciers, traces of which still exist upon every rock in the valley.—Muir.
This is a complex declarative sentence.
The subject is The Merced Yosemite. The predicate is was created by the action of five immense glaciers, traces of which still exist upon every rock in the valley.
The base-word of the subject is the noun Yosemite; it is modified by the adjective Merced and the article the.
The predicate verb is was created; it is modified by the prepositional phrase by the action of five immense glaciers, traces of which still exist upon every rock in the valley.
The base-word of the object of the preposition by is action; it is modified by the prepositional phrase of five immense glaciers, traces of which still exist upon every rock in the valley and by the article the. The base-word of the object of the preposition of is glaciers; it is modified by the adjectives immense and five, and by the unrestrictive adjective clause traces of which still exist upon every rock in the valley; this clause is introduced by the relative pronoun which.
The subject of the clause is traces of which. The predicate is still exist upon every rock in the valley.
The base-word of the subject is the noun traces. It is modified by the prepositional phrase of which.
The predicate verb is exist; it is modified by the adverb still and the prepositional phrase upon every rock in the valley. The base-word of the object of the preposition upon is rock; it is modified by the adjective every and the prepositional phrase in the valley.
Exercise 6
Analyze the following sentences. If the analysis is written, take pains to arrange it well on paper. Divide it into paragraphs. Either underline or enclose in quotation marks all words quoted from the sentence. Use abbreviations. Do not write out elements in full if they consist of more than two words. Instead write the first and last words with a dash between them.
1. Fear is a wonderful goad to remorse.—H. H.
2. A part of the citizens seceded from the main body, and formed a separate community on the neighboring marshes.—Prescott.
3. He is great who confers the most benefits.—Emerson.
4. After two hours’ march the cortege stopped at the end of the quay, where the Prince de Joinville had stationed himself at the head of the officers of the three French ships of war.—Thackeray.
5. How many men and women perform their daily tasks from the highest motives alone—for the glory of God and the relief of man’s estate?—C. W. Eliot.
6. No one is useless in this world who lightens the burden of it for another.—Dickens.
7. He lifted his enormous ears, gave a short trumpet, and for an instant wavered in his determination whether to attack or fly.—Sir Samuel Baker.
8. Simplicity must be the first element of literary art.—Higginson.
9. I touched him on the shoulder, at which he collared me and nearly knocked me down.—Miss Mulock.
10. Those were the days when a man could hold three small livings, starve a curate apiece on two of them, and live badly himself on the third.—George Eliot.
11. A woman kept the summer school, sharp, precise, unsympathetic, keen and untiring.—Beecher.
12. I hold our actual knowledge very cheap.—Emerson.
13.
Then saunter down that terrace whence the sea
All fair with wing-like sails you may discern.
—Jean Ingelow.
14. Man hath no fate except past days.—E. Arnold.
15. How few men in all the pride of culture can emulate the easy grace of a bright woman’s letter!—Higginson.
16. And, what is notable, in no time whatever can they entirely eradicate out of living men’s hearts a certain altogether peculiar reverence for Great Men.—Carlyle.