The complex sentence with an adverbial clause of result (consequence) 


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The complex sentence with an adverbial clause of result (consequence)



§ 175. An adverbial clause of result denotes some consequence or result of the action expressed in the main clause. It may be introduced by the conjunction so that, or simply that.

 

Light fell on her there, so that Soames could see her face, eyes, hair, strangely as he remembered them,

strangely beautiful.

 

Clauses with the correlatives so and such (so... that, such... that) may express manner with a shade of resultative meaning and are treated as such. However one should bear in mind that the line of demarcation between cases of jo... that and so that is rather difficult to draw when the two words follow one another.

The complex sentence with mutually subordinated clauses

In complex sentences of this type it is impossible to differentiate which of the clauses is the main one and which is subordinate. We shall consider two patterns of such sentences.

 

§ 177. Clauses of proportionate agreement (or comparison). They express a proportional relationship - proportionality or equivalence; the more intensive is the action or quality described in one clause, the more intensive becomes the other, described in the following clause. Although sentences containing such clauses are undoubtedly complex, it is nevertheless impossible to state which of the clauses is the main one and which is subordinate, since they are of the same pattern -two twin clauses, looking like one another.

Clauses of proportionate agreement are joined by the conjunction as (correlated with the adverb of degree so in the other clause); or by means of the correlative adverbs so... so in both clauses. Proportionate agreement between the clauses may also be expressed by the correlative particles the... the, followed by the comparative degree of adverbs (or adjectives).

As time went on, so their hopes began to wane.

The more he reflected on the idea, the more he liked it.

The further I penetrated into London, the profounder grew the stillness.

 

Proportionate agreement occurs in such aphoristic sentences as the more the better, the sooner the better, which may refer to various situations.

§ 178. The second pattern of mutually subordinated clauses expresses temporal relations - a quick succession of actions or events, often overlapping with one another for a short period of time. These clauses form an indivisible whole owing to correlative elements and sometimes partial inversion in the first clause. The order in which the elements follow one another is fixed. As partial inversion is possible when the predicate consists of the operator and the notional part, only analytical forms or compound predicates are used.

There are several variants of the pattern:

1. No sooner... than.

No sooner had Tom seen us than he jumped into a bus.

No sooner could the chairman finish his speech than a great noise started.

2. Scarcely... when, scarcely... before.

Scarcely had he seen us when he jumped into a bus.

The door had scarcely closed behind her before it opened again.

3. Hardly... when.

Hardly could he finish his last sentence when a great noise started.

I had hardly finished when Holmes returned with the news that the boy was putting in the horse.

4. Negation... when.

 

He had not closed the door when he heard somebody knock at it.

5. Just... when.

 

He had just cut a mighty slice of bread when he heard somebody’s footsteps.

 

The role of the past perfect tense in the first clause is also of importance as it does not manifest in this case real precedence but peculiar temporal relation, that of a quick succession of events or actions, often overlapping.

Pseudo-complex sentences

§ 179. We shall consider sentences consisting of two clauses joined according to some pattern of subordination, but different from other complex sentences in the relation the clauses bear to one another. There are several types of pseudo-complex sentences. In the first type the splitting of the sentence into clauses is a device for the sake of emphasizing this or that part of the sentence; actually the meaning of the sentence does not require splitting (or cleaving) into clauses. These sentences are called emphatic (or cleft) sentences.



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