Inversion after place adjuncts
336b
Particularly in very formal and literary styles, inversion of subject and lexical verb
may occur after a front-placed adjunct denoting location:
In the corner
stood another man of the law
, by his isolation and beribboned
uniform clearly one of a higher rank.
Out of the dark, away to my right,
came the roar of a pneumatic drill
.
This does occur occasionally in informal speech, especially with frequent
expressions such as here comes and there goes:
Here comes the bus.
There goes the phone.
(often said when a phone starts to ring)
[telling a story about a crime and the arrival of a police helicopter]
Out comes the helicopter, hovering over everybody’s house, waking
everybody up.
A–Z
45 Here, there
hardly
little*
on no account
on no occasion
scarcely
seldom
under no
circumstances
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |