Лекции по теоретической грамматике английского языка для студентов



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The Infinitive 
Historically, the infinitive is a verbal noun. Hence its double nature: it 
combines the features of the verb with those of the noun. It is the form of the verb 
which expresses a process in general, i.e. a process that is not restricted (i.e. 
concretized) by person, number, tense, and mood. Because of its general process 
meaning, the infinitive is treated as the head-form of the whole paradigm of the 
verb.  
The infinitive has two presentation forms: marked and unmarked. The 
marked infinitive is distinguished by the grammatical word-morpheme 
to

historically a preposition. Similar to other grammatical word morphemes
to 
can be 
used to represent the corresponding construction as a whole (e.g. 
You can read any 
of the books if you want to
). It can also be separated from its notional part by a 
word or phrase, usually of adverbial nature, forming the so-called split infinitive 
(e.g. 
We need your participation, to thoroughly investigate the issue
.) The marked 
infinitive is an analytic grammatical form.  
The other form of the infinitive is unmarked; it is traditionally called the 
bare infinitive. It is used in various analytic forms (non-modal and modal), with 
verbs of physical perception, with the verbs 
let, bid, make, help
 (optionally), with a 
few modal phrases (
had better, would rather, would have
, etc.), with the relative 
why

The infinitive combines the properties of the verb with those of the noun, as 
a result it serves as the verbal name of a process. It has the grammatical categories 
of voice, aspect and temporal correlation. Consequently, the categorial paradigm of 
the infinitive includes eight forms: the indefinite active, the continuous active, the 
perfect active, the perfect continuous active; the indefinite passive, the continuous 
passive, the perfect passive, the perfect continuous passive. 
   
to take — to be taking 
to have taken — to have been taking 
to be taken —to be being taken  
to have been taken — to have been being taken 


 
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The continuous and perfect continuous passive can only be used 
occasionally, with a strong stylistic colouring. It is the indefinite infinitive that 
constitues the head-form of the verbal paradigm. 
The verbal features of the infinitive. Like the finite form of verb, the 
infinitive distinguishes the categories of aspect, voice, and temporal correlation. 
The paradigm of the infinitive is determined by the semantico-syntactic 
properties of the process. If the process is intransitive, we cannot derive voice 
forms 
e.g. to walk – to be walking vs. *to be being walked 
to have walked – to have been walking vs. *to have been being walked 
The nounal features of the infinitive. Semantically and morphologically, the 
infinitive is much more similar to the verb than to the noun: its verbal features 
outweigh its nounal features. Similar to the noun, the infinitive can be used as the 
subject or part of the subject, the predicative, and the attribute.  
 


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