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Grammatical
Summary
Types of Wh-Questions
A wh-question is used for seeking content information
relating to persons, things, facts, time, place, reason, manner,
etc. Wh-questions differ depending on the kind of content information
sought. Content information associated with persons, things,
and facts is generally sought with one set of wh-words, and
content information associated with time, place, reason, and
manner is sought with another set of wh-words.
Persons, things, facts: who,
what, whose, which
Time, place, reason, and manner: when,
where, why, how
Questioning Subject and Object Positions
With respect to sentence structure, content
information associated with persons, things, and facts occurs
in various subject and object positions within a sentence. Consider
the question below and its possible answer.
Q: Who
manages your companys payroll system.
A: A local payroll firm
manages our companys payroll system.
This question with who
refers to the content information in the highlighted subject
position of the answer. In this case, the subject is the noun
phrase, a local payroll firm.
In the next set, what
refers to the content information in the highlighted object
(or "complement") position in the answer after the
verb said. In this case,
the object is an entire clause, that
a good accounting system is vital to a companys success.
Q: What
did the accountant say?
A: The accountant said that a good
accounting system is vital to a companys success.
In the next set, which
marketing plan refers to the highlighted object of
preposition position after the preposition about
in the answer. In this case, the object of the preposition is
a complex noun phrase, the marketing
plan that was recently implemented.
Q: Which marketing plan were you talking about?
A: They were talking about the marketing
plan that was recently implemented.
These examples illustrate that the information
associated with persons, things, and facts is generally represented
in sentence structure by noun phrases and clauses in various
subject and object positions. In linguistic theory, these are
known as "argument positions."
Questioning Other Sentence Positions
With respect to sentence structure, content
information associated with time, place, reason, and manner
does NOT occur in subject and object positions within a sentence.
Consider the question below and its possible answer.
Q: When
does your company begin its fiscal year?
A: My company begins its fiscal year on
July 1.
This question with when
refers to the content information in the highlighted portion
of the answer. The phrase on July 1
pertains to time and is not a subject or an object.
In the next set, the question with why
refers to the content information highlighted in the answer
in the clause beginning with because.
The clause, which expresses a reason, is not a subject or an
object of the main clause, The accountant
debited the account.
Q: Why
did the accountant debit that customers account?
A: The accountant debited the account because
the customers check bounced.
In linguistic theory, these positions associated
with time, place, reason, and manner are known as "adjunct
positions."
There is a fundamental difference between argument
and adjunct positions. Argument positions (subjects, objects)
are required in a sentence structure; adjunct positions are
optional. This difference can be seen if the targeted arguments
and adjuncts are removed from the answers to the above questions:
ARGUMENTS:
*
oversees our companys payroll
system
*The accountant said
My company begins its fiscal year
The accountant debited the account
The * means that the sentences with missing
arguments are ungrammatical. The sentences with missing adjuncts
contain less information, but they are nevertheless well-formed,
grammatical sentences. This difference has a bearing on wh-question
formation.
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