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  Harry's heart gave a horrible jolt. A test? In front of the whole school? But he didn't know any magic yet –– what on earth would he have to do? He hadn't expected something like this the moment they arrived. He looked around anxiously and saw that everyone else looked terrified, too. No one was talking much except Hermione Granger, who was whispering very fast about all the spells she'd learned and wondering which one she'd need. Harry tried hard not to listen to her. He'd never been more nervous, never, not even when he'd had to take a school report [i] home to the Dursleys saying that he'd somehow turned his teacher's wig blue. He kept his eyes fixed on the door. Any second now, Professor McGonagall would come back and lead him to his doom.

  Then something happened that made him jump about a foot in the air - several people [ii] behind him screamed.

(Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J.K.Rowling)

The best part is that the owner shares the same passion as the customers when it comes to buying parts [iii] for their cars. (pristineparts.com)

My own language using different suffixes for modifying noun, or adverb, verb or the sentence, when I come across [i]~[iii], it’s not easy to decide either these modify the previous noun phrase or they behave like adverb (or adjunct) to modify verb (or sentence, clause?). Can they be discerned either way, or are they ambivalent? Is it only dependent on, who the reader is, when a person reads?

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  • 1
    May I ask what you think [i] applies to? I think it can only be an object of take. With [ii], you can't really tell, and I don't think it's useful to make that distinction: can someone that isn't behind you scream from behind you? And with [iii], again, you can't really tell, but I would expect it to apply to buying parts.
    – jimsug
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 0:47
  • @jimsug, I guess 'home' is either modifying 'a school report: meaning 'a school report that is going to home'; or modifying 'take a school report': meaning 'take a school report to the home' (take the report (adjuct 1) to the home (adjunt 2) to the Dursleys)
    – Listenever
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 1:07
  • Hmm. I don't think it can modify a school report .
    – jimsug
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 1:09
  • 1
    ii and iii modify the noun that immediately precedes the preposition (so, people, parts). i "take something home" is a fixed expression. You can also say "take home the something," so "take home a school report."
    – user6951
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 1:30
  • 1
    @CarSmack: Umm, taking something somewhere is pretty flexible, I wouldn't call it a fixed expression. And I'm fairly sure that the prepositional phrases in [ii] and [iii] can modify either the noun or the verb.
    – jimsug
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 4:14

2 Answers 2

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A locative or preposition phrase immediately following a noun is usually taken as a restrictive modifier on the noun, if the semantics permit.

I have no hesitation in describing your [ii] and [iii] as modifiers on the preceding nouns. Which people screamed? —the people behind him. What kind of parts do they buy? —parts for their cars.

  • But in a different sytactic location or a different semantic context, the same phrases would be taken to modify the verb or the clause:

    People screamed behind him. —the position compels an understanding of behind him as the origin of the screaming.

    Just as customers have a passion for buying toys for their children, they have a passion for buying parts for their cars. —the parallelism compels an understanding of for their cars as designating the beneficiary of the purchase.

But in [i], as jimsug says, the locative home is an “object” of take. I would call it an object complement, which as you already know means it ‘modifies’ report while being syntactically dependent on take.

In other circumstances, however, the semantics of an adjunct may prohibit ascribing it to an immediately preceding noun:

Prof. Sartorius read your letter with great pleasure.
He accepted our proposal on one condition.

There are, however, ‘borderline’ situations:

Prof. Sartorius read your letter in the British Library.

Does in the British Library tell us where he read the letter or which letter he read?

In these cases we must look to the broader semantic context. It is unlikely that a letter by you, Listenever, forms a part of the BL's collections, so the default reading here would be that Prof. Sartorius was in the BL when he read your letter.

But what about these?

1) Prof. Sartorius read Dickens’ letter in the British Library.
2) Prof. Sartorius read the copy of Dickens’ letter in the British Library.

Here I suggest, as rule of thumb, that we take the prepositional phrase to modify the noun only if it is understood as restrictive.

  • 1) There are many letters by Dickens in the BL, so although a specific letter is probably intended, it is very unlikely that in the British Library is intended to distinguish this letter by Dickens from others are elsewhere. The ‘default’ reading is that in the British Library modifies read: “It was in the British Library that Prof. Sartorius read Dickens’ letter.”

  • 2) While the BL probably has copies of many letters by Dickens, the copy implies a specific copy, making it far more likely that in the BL is intended to designate which copy Prof. Sartorius read. The ‘default’ reading is that in the British Library modifies copy: “It was the copy of Dickens’ letter in the British Library that Prof. Sartorius read.”

In both cases, however, these are ‘default’ readings: they are implicatures, which may be cancelled by further context:

1a) Prof. Sartorius read Dickens’ letter in the British Library, but did not read his letter on the same topic in the V&A.

2a) Prof. Sartorius read the copy of Dickens’ letter in the British Library, where he had taken it order to compare it to the original.

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  • I'm interested: does home modify report? Would you say the same if it were instead here?
    – jimsug
    Commented Jul 10, 2014 at 22:44
  • @jimsug I believe so; home is sort of wonky in being understandable as a PP with a deleted preposition, and here is a pro-PP. Any locative PP can serve as the complement of BE, acting there as a subject-oriented complement (I'm at work now, I'm home now, I'm here now), so I see no reason for not seeing home or here as object-oriented complements of take. Commented Jul 11, 2014 at 2:19
  • @StoneyB, +1 for you would call it (i) an object complement, but I still didn't get why (ii) couldn't be called a subject complement. Commented Jul 11, 2014 at 19:20
  • @LucianSava You're right that he can't take the report home without taking himself home, too; but the 'target' of the sentence, what it's about, is getting the report home. Commented Jul 11, 2014 at 20:41
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he'd had to take a school report home to the Dursleys

Clause analysis:

  • Subject: he
  • Verb (Phrase): had had to take
  • Object: a school report
  • Object: home
  • Adjunct: to the Dursleys

home

This can only be an object for the verb take. It cannot, as you suggest above, port-modify the noun phrase a school report, unless it is a school report home: a place where school reports live. This is possible, but incredibly unlikely.

several people behind him screamed

  • Subject: several people or several people behind him
  • Verb (Phrase): screamed
  • Adjunct/circumstance: (behind him)

behind him

This is an interesting case - because of its location, the clause might have either:

  • the noun phrase several people behind him
    Indicating that the several people who screamed were behind Harry.
  • the noun phrase several people and the adjunct to the sentence behind him Indicating that several people screamed behind Harry.

As you can see, there's essentially no difference in meaning. I highly doubt that people could scream behind Harry if they aren't behind him. This might be an unusual case, though, and in this instance it doesn't matter whether the prepositional phrase modifies the entire clause, or just the noun phrase.

buying parts for their (the customers') cars

  • Subject: None - this is a non-finite clause, as you can see with the non-finite verb
  • Verb (Phrase): buying
  • Adjunct/circumstance: (this is a circumstance of reason) for their (the customers') cars

for their (the customers') cars

This prepositional phrase can only modify the verb buying.

However, there's the possibility that it actually modifies the matrix clause:

The best part is that the owner shares the same passion as the customers (when it comes to buying parts) for their cars.

Unfortunately, there's no way to tell without being able to question the author.

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  • I’m still confused, there should be a relation between the object “a school report” and the object “home” as the object “home” can’t stand alone while the object “a school report” can. Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 10:59
  • The object school report can only stand alone with a different sense of take, as in to obtain. The sense of take as in to transport requires two objects, one of which is home.
    – jimsug
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 11:02
  • From what you commented, “ Umm, taking something somewhere is pretty flexible”, I’ve already read what your answer would be. But there is an terminology of yours that makes me confused. You are saying both ‘something’ and ‘somewhere’ are objects, while they both are named as complements in the book of the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language.
    – Listenever
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 13:19
  • For example, ‘put it on the table’, verb put takes two complements. From other two books, Bas Aart’s, Angela Downing’s, I get the same terminology. As it were, the former is complement as a direct object, the latter as a locative (I’ve got an answer that Mister StoneyB divides the locative into two categories - locatve and directive.
    – Listenever
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 13:20
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    @Listenever An object is a specific type of complement. Take home X is a verb+particle construction (where "particle" in this case refers to the intransitive preposition home). This analysis can be supported in various ways, e.g. the particle shift from "take home X" to "take X home" when X bears stress, alternation with other prepositions but not noun phrases, etc. It is non-traditional to analyze home as an intransitive preposition, though; see CGEL p.281.
    – user230
    Commented Jul 9, 2014 at 16:12

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