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Object Clauses and Attributive Clauses
constant manner under cover —
or in easy despite —
of which he met the world, was recognised always as quite uniquely himself. (BUECHNER) The object clause coming after
developing seems to go on as far as the noun
manner, where a subordinate clause of the second degree begins, namely an attributive one to this noun. Object clauses of this type are very characteristically English, and in translating such sentences
into another language, for example, into Russian, the turn of the sentence has usually to be changed altogether. Compare also: Fes,
my father can seldom be prevailed on to give the waters what I think a fair trial. (J. AUSTEN)
Give somebody (something) a fair trial is a phraseological unit, with both nominal elements in it necessary for its existence. This has not prevented, in the last example, the substitution
of an object clause (what I call a fair trial) for the phrase
a fair trial. This plainly shows that the subordinate clause is here exactly similar in function to the object in a simple sentence, and that the term "object clause" is therefore fully justified.
There is also another type of object clause. This is found in sentences having in the main clause a predicate verb which combines almost exclusively with object clauses and only with a very few possible objects (within a simple sentence). A typical verb of this kind is the verb
say. Compare the following example:
She could not say what is was. (LAWRENCE) If we drop the subordinate clause we get the unfinished sentence
She could not say. . . The words that can come after the verb
say and perform the function of object in a simple sentence are very few indeed: these are chiefly the pronouns
this, that, anything, everything, and the noun
the truth.
On the whole it may be said that subordinate clauses are much more characteristic of the verb
say than an object in a simple sentence.
The same may be said about the verb
ask. If we take the sentence
She asked whether this was true, and drop the subordinate clause, we shall get the unfinished sentence
She asked. . . The possibilities of completing this sentence by means of an object within the framework of a simple sentence are again very limited: there may be the pronouns
this, that, something, nothing, and the noun
a question. In
this case, too, a subordinate clause is much more characteristic of the verb than an object in a simple sentence. Compare also the following example:
He merely suggested that Motley's peculiar gifts tended to make him animate and inflate whatever might, seem to him the most appealing among the host of potentialities attending any unextraordinary human situation; that if, as certainly might be the case, there were validity in his suspicions, he, Tristram, could be no more than very interested to hear of it. (BUECHNER) The object clause,
whatever might seem to him the most appealing among the host of potentialities attending any unextraordinary human situation, is rather long; yet it does not pro-