Grammatical
Summary
Gaps
Inside
Relative Clauses
One of the most distinguishing characteristics
of English relative clauses is that they often contain gaps.
A gap is a position within a sentence structure where something
appears to be missing in comparison with most other typical
sentence structures. In an ordinary main clause or an independent
sentence, the major grammatical phrases generally appear in
the order:
SUBJECT VERB OBJECT
In contrast, in a relative clause there will
be a gap when the targeted grammatical phrase would appear in
any position other than the subject position.
Subject Position
First consider relative clauses that target
the subject position:
The photographer who
lent me a scanner asked me to return
it.
In the relative clause, who
appears in the subject position before the verb lent,
so there is no gap.
Object Position
However, in the next sentence, who
represents the object position after visited,
so there is a gap in that position (represented for the sake
of illustration by a bullet).
The photographer who
I visited
at the lab lent me a scanner.
Comparing that relative clause with a sentence
like I visited
the photographer shows that a noun phrase
object ordinarily appears in the object position after the verb
visited.
Object of Preposition Position
In the next two sentences, the gap appears after
the preposition from. Compare
I borrowed a
scanner from the photographer.
The photographer who
I borrowed a scanner from
asked me to return it.
The photographer that
I borrowed a scanner from
asked me to return it.
Wh-Phrase with
Whose
In the sentence below, the gap occurs after
borrowed
and represents the entire wh-phrase
whose scanner,
which has moved up to the front of the relative
clause. Compare
I borrowed her scanner.
The photographer whose
scanner I
borrowed asked me
to return it.
Entire Wh-Phrase Starts Relative Clause
Similarly, the gap in the next sentence occurs
after a scanner
and represents the entire prepositional phrase from
whom, which has moved up to the front of the
clause. Compare I
borrowed a scanner from him.
The photographer from
whom I borrowed a scanner
asked me to return it.
Gap Can Be Far Away
In more complex sentences that contain a variety
of embedded clauses within the relative clause itself, the gap
can be very far away from the front of the relative clause.
Note the positions of the gaps in the following sentences.
The photographer that
my teacher recommended that I borrow a scanner from
refused to lend one to me.
A technique which
we were advised to consider using
for our project yielded successful results.
The software my
friend told me her brother thought we should buy
through
a mail order catalogue was out of stock.
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