particularly common in short responses and with pronoun subjects. Subject-verb
A:
Well, we’re ready.
B: So
are we
. Let’s go.
Well, I’ve packed my case, and
so
should you
, I think. We haven’t got that
much time.
The negative is formed with initial neither or nor, or with not … either. In the case
of negatives beginning with neither or nor, subject-verb inversion follows:
Frank didn’t go and
neither
did we
in the end.
A: Oh, I haven’t got any small change at all.
B: Nor
have I
.
A: I haven’t got a fork.
B: Oh,
Anne has
n’t
either. I’ll get some.
A–Z
71
So for further examples
COHESION AND COMPARATIVE FORMS
135
Comparative forms across clauses and sentences can signal cohesion:
Jim can play pool better than me. He’s had
more practice.
(understood: … more practice than I have)
Continuing south, you’ll feel like an insignificant speck at the feet of the city’s
tallest structures. For a
better view of them and their surroundings, take the
short monorail ride to Harbor Island.
Û
460–471 Comparison
COHESION AND LINKING ADJUNCTS (IN ADDITION, HOWEVER)
136
General
136a
Linking adjuncts explicitly indicate the semantic relationship between two clauses
or sentences or paragraphs (
Û
335
):
[description of the city of Cardenas in Cuba; bite its lip and bide its time means
‘be patient and wait (to get regeneration funds)’]
Many of its buildings, particularly the fortifications overlooking the harbour,
are in need of renovation, but, with Havana and Trinidad eating up most of the
regeneration budget, it seems that Cardenas will have to bite its lip and bide its
time. It is,
nonetheless, a charming little city and worth a look.
His face and hands were black with dirt.
In spite of this, Catherine was very
glad to see him and rushed up to kiss him.
256 | Grammar across turns and sentences
Cambridge Grammar of English
[from a book about how second-language learners acquire vocabulary]
Second-language learners usually have to learn at a rate faster than the
‘natural’ rate of first-language acquisition.
In addition, early stages of second-
language acquisition involve a relatively small number of high-frequency
words, for which there is a greater pay-off instructionally.
However, second-
language learners may also have a greater need to use context.
Linking adjuncts can co-occur with coordinating conjunctions (in green in the
examples below), in which case they follow the conjunction:
So I would like you to read the documents in order to improve or at least
confirm your own knowledge and understanding of the network set up here.
But
secondly, it’s important not only that you can answer students’ questions
but you can tell them where the information is available to them.
Something happened to you
and
as a result your arm was broken.
Linking adjuncts are a large class which includes single-word and phrasal items.
The most common ones are listed in 136b–136j (classified according to the
semantic relations which they signal). Most of these linking adjuncts are more
frequent in formal styles and in writing, but some (marked with *) are more
frequent in informal spoken contexts.
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