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Thomson_theory_Auxiliaries_be_have_do

 

11 be, have, do

be as an auxiliary verb

109 Form and use in the formation of tenses

A Form

Principal parts: be, was, been Gerund/present participle: being

Present tense:

Affirmative Negative Interrogative
I am/I'm I am not/ I'm not am I?
you are/you 're you are not/you 're not are you?
he is/he 's he is not/he 'S not is he?
she is/she 's she is not/she's not is she?
it is/it's it is not/it's not is it?
we are/we 're we are not/we 're not are we?
you are/you 're you are not/you 're not are you?
they are/they're they are not/they're not are they?

Alternative negative contractions: you aren't, he isn't etc. Negative interrogative: am I not/aren 't I? are you not/aren 't you? is he not/isn 't he? etc.

Past tense:    
Affirmative Negative Interrogative
/ was / was not/wasn 't was I?
you were you were not/weren 't were you?
he/she/it was he/she/it was not/wasn 't was he/she/it?
we were we were not/weren 't were we?
you were you were not/weren 't were you?
they were they were not/weren 't were they?

Negative interrogative: was I not/wasn't I? were you not/weren't you? was he not/wasn't he? etc.

The forms are the same when be is used as an ordinary verb. Other tenses follow the rules for ordinary verbs. But be is not normally used in the continuous form except in the passive and as shown in 115 B.

B Use to form tenses

110to be as an auxiliary

is used in continuous active forms: He is working/will be working etc., and in all passive forms: He was followed/is being followed.

Note that be can be used in the continuous forms in the passive: Active: They are carrying him. Passive: He is being carried.

(For be used in the continuous with adjectives, see 115 B.)

111 be + infinitive

A The be + infinitive construction, e.g. I am to go, is extremely important and can be used in the following ways:

1 To convey orders or instructions:

No one is to leave this building without the permission of the police.

(no one must leave)

He is to stay here till we return, (he must stay)

This is a rather impersonal way of giving instructions and is chiefly used with the third person. When used with you it often implies that the speaker is passing on instructions issued by someone else. The difference between (a) Stay here, Tom and (b) You are to stay here, Tom is that in (a) the speaker himself is ordering Tom to stay, while in (b) he may be merely conveying to Tom the wishes of another person.

This distinction disappears of course in indirect speech, and the be + infinitive construction is an extremely useful way of expressing indirect commands, particularly when the introductory verb is in the present tense:

He says, 'Wait till I come.' = He says that we are to wait till he comes. or when there is a clause in front of the imperative:



He said, 'If I fall asleep at the wheel wake me up.' = He said that if he fell asleep at the wheel she was to wake him up. It is also used in reporting requests for instructions: 'Where shall I put it, sir?' he asked = He asked where he was to put it. (See also 318 B.)

2 To convey a plan:

She is to be married next month.

The expedition is to start in a week's time. This construction is very much used in newspapers:

The Prime Minister is to make a statement tomorrow. In headlines the verb be is often omitted to save space:

Prime Minister to make statement tomorrow. Past forms:

He was to go. (present infinitive)

He was to have gone, (perfect infinitive)

The first of these doesn't tell us whether the plan was carried out or not. The second is used for an unfulfilled plan, i.e. one which was not carried out:

The Lord Mayor was to have laid the foundation stone but he was taken ill last night so the Lady Mayoress is doing it instead.

B was/were + infinitive can express an idea of destiny:

He received a blow on the head. It didn 't worry him at the time but it

was to be very troublesome later, (turned out to be/proved

troublesome)

They said goodbye, little knowing that they were never to meet again

(were destined never to meet)

C be about + infinitive expresses the immediate future:

They are about to start. (They are just going to start/They are on

the point of starting.) just can be added to make the future even more immediate:

They are just about to leave. Similarly in the past:

He was just about to dive when he saw the shark. be on the point of + gerund has the same meaning as be about + infinitive, but is a shade more immediate.

be as an ordinary verb

Form: as for be used as an auxiliary (see 113 A).

112 be to denote existence, be + adjective

A be is the verb normally used to denote the existence of, or to give information about, a person or thing:

Tom is a carpenter. The dog is in the garden.

Malta is an island. The roads were rough and narrow.

Gold is a metal. Peter was tall and fair.

B When a noun representing an indefinite person or thing is the subject of the verb be we normally use a there + be + noun construction. We can say A policeman is at the door but There is a policeman at the door would be more usual.

Note that, though there appears to be the subject, the real subject is the noun that follows the verb, and if this noun is plural the verb must be plural too:

There are two policemen at the door.

In the above sentences both constructions (noun + be and there + be + noun) are possible. But when be is used to mean exist/happen/ take place the there construction is necessary:

an be used similarly with someone/anyone/no one/something etc.-There's someone on the phone for you. (R)

 

113 it is and there is compared

A IT IS

1 in expressions of time and date:

What time is it? It’s 10 o’clock.

2 in expressions of distance:

How far is it to York? It is sixty miles.

3 In expressions of weather and temperature:

It is cold.

4 in questions and answers about identity:

-Who is it? It’s Tom.

5 in sentences where an infinitive is the real subject:

It is easy to see why he left home.

6 in sentences where a clause is the real subject:

It is possible that he never intended to shoot her.

7 to give special emphasis to a word or phrase:

It was pollution that killed that fish.

BSome examples may help to prevent confusion between the two forms:

1 it is + adjective; there is + noun:

It is foggy or There is a fog.

It was very wet or There was a lot of rain.

It won't be very sunny or There won't be much sun.

2 it is, there is of distance and time:

// is a long way to York.

There is a long way still to go. (We have many miles still to go.)

It is time to go home. (We always start home at six and it is six now.)

There is time for us to go home and come back here again before the

film starts. (That amount of time exists.)

3 it is, used for identity, and there is + noun/pronoun:

There is someone at the door. I think it's the man to read the meters. There's a key here. Is it the key of the safe?

it is, used in cleft sentences (see 67 D), and there is:

It is the grandmother who makes the decisions, (the grandmother, not any other member of the family)

. and there's the grandmother, who lives in the granny-flat. (the grandmother exists)

 


Date: 2015-02-16; view: 759


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