Lecture 5 The Verb: the Categories of Voice and Mood. Oppositional Reduction of Verbal Categories 1.
The category of voice.
2.
The category of mood.
3.
Mood and modality.
4.
Oppositional reduction of verbal categories.
1. The category of voice The form of the verb may show whether the agent expressed by the subject
is the doer of the action or the recipient of the action
(John broke the vase - the vase was broken) . The objective relations between the action and the subject or
object of the action find their expression in language as the grammatical category
of voice. Therefore, the category of voice reflects the objective relations between
the action itself and the subject or object of the action:
The category of voice is realized through the opposition Active
voice::Passive voice. The passive is marked both in meaning and in form and the
active as unmarked both in meaning and in form.
The realization of the voice category is restricted because of the implicit
grammatical meaning of transitivity/intransitivity. In accordance with this
meaning, all English verbs should fall into transitive and intransitive. However, the
classification turns out to be more complex and comprises 6 groups:
1. Verbs used only transitively:
to mark, to raise ;
2. Verbs with the main transitive meaning:
to see, to make, to build ;
3. Verbs of intransitive meaning and secondary transitive meaning. A lot of
intransitive verbs may develop a secondary transitive meaning:
They laughed me into agreement; He danced the girl out of the room ;
4. Verbs of a double nature, neither of the meanings are the leading one, the
verbs can be used both transitively and intransitively:
to drive home - to drive a car ;
5. Verbs that are never used in the Passive Voice:
to seem, to become ;
44
6. Verbs that realize their passive meaning only in special contexts:
to live, to sleep, to sit, to walk, to jump .