Tuesday, October 22, 2019
A Guide to Lexical Verbs
A Guide to Lexical Verbs In English grammar, a lexical verbà is theà main verbà in a sentence. Lexical verbs- also called full verbs- convey theà semantic (or lexical) meaningà in a sentence, such as I ran fast or I ate the entire hamburger. Not surprisingly, the great majority of verbs in English are lexical verbs, which are those that are not auxiliaryà (orà helping)à verbs. Lexical vs. Auxiliary Verbs Lexical verbs are the doing verbs, while auxiliary verbs are their helpers, asà eNotesà explains: Lexical verbs indicate the main action taking place in any sentence and therefore the intention of the sentence becomes clear; whereas, auxiliary verbs have a more subtle function because they often complete a sentence without the reader being aware how they contribute to [its] structure. An auxiliary verb determines theà mood,à tense,à voice,à orà aspectà of another verb in a verb phrase. Put another way, aà helping verb comes before theà main (lexical) verb in aà sentence. Together, they form aà verb phrase. In English, the auxiliary verbs are: Is, am, are, was, wereBe, being, beenHas,à have,à hadDo, does, didWill, shall, should, wouldCan, couldMay, might, must Lexical verbs constitute all the rest. Lexical verbs can be grouped according to four types:à transitive and intransitive,à linking,à dynamicà andà static (or stative),à as well asà regularà andà irregular. Transitive and Intransitive Aà transitive lexical verb expresses action and needs a direct object to receive that action, notes Dictionary.com, which gives the sentenceà ââ¬Å"Aliceà seesà the candleâ⬠as an example. In the sentence, seesà is the lexical verb and is transitive, whileà the candleà is the direct object because it receives the action of the lexical verb sees. Intransitive verbs, by contrast,à express action but donââ¬â¢t affect a direct object. For example, if you say ââ¬Å"Aliceà dances,â⬠the wordà dancesà is the lexical verb, but it is intransitive because it doesnââ¬â¢t require a direct object. Linking Verbs A linking verb is an important lexical verbà (such as a form ofà beà orà seem) that joins theà subjectà of a sentence to a word or phrase thatà tells something about the subject. For example,à isà functions as a linking verb in the sentence The bossà isà unhappy. Note thatà to beà verbs such as is can also serve as auxiliary verbs depending on how the sentence is constructed. In the sentence, Aliceà is helpingà Victor with his homework, isà serves as the auxiliary verb because it helps the lexical verbà helping.à Dynamic and Static Aà dynamic verb- also called an action verb- is used primarily to indicate an action, process, or sensation. An example of dynamic verbs in action is this saying uttered by Hall of Fame baseball player Willie Mays in describing the game: Theyà throwà the ball, Ià hità it. Theyà hità the ball, Ià catchà it. By contrast, a static (or stative) verbà isà used primarily to describe a state or situation.à An example would be,à Weà areà what weà believeà weà are.à Note that as in the linking verbs section, theà to beà verb- in this case,à are- can be a lexical verb, describing a state of being. Regular and Irregular A regularà verb is one that forms its tenses, especially theà past tenseà andà past participle, by adding one in the set of generally accepted standardized suffixes. Regular verbs are conjugated by adding either -d, -ed, -ing, or -s to theirà base form. Anà irregularà verb, meanwhile, does not follow the usualà rulesà for verb forms. In the sentence, ââ¬Å"Sheà looksà in the mirror,â⬠the main verbà looksà is a regular verb, Dictionary.com explains, adding that the past tense of look is looked. So in the past tense, the sentence would read, She lookedà in the mirror. In comparison, an example of irregular verbs in a sentence would be: The bridge theyà ââ¬â¹built brought traffic in both directions. The present tense of the first verb in the sentence is build, but in the past tense, it isà built. Similarly, the present tense of the second verb would beà bring,à but in the past tenseà as used in the sentence, itsà brought. Hard-Working Verbs Clearly, lexical verbs do much of the heavy lifting in English. They provide the action (intransitive and dynamic verbs), explain what is happening to various direct objects (transitive verbs), and describe states of being (static) among their many duties. Learn the lexical verbs in English and you will master the very heart of what it means to speak and write the languageà correctly, effectively, and in an engaging manner
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