时间:2019-01-30 作者:英语课 分类:英语语法 Grammar Girl


英语课

Grammar Girl here.


Today’s topic is appositives.


Guest-writer Bonnie Trenga writes,


Today we have to decide if information is essential or extra, because if it’s extra we’ll need some extra commas. The concept I’m referring to is called an appositive. A listener, Mary, raised this topic when she asked, “Is it OK to start a sentence with ‘A vocational counselor 1, Jane Smith, has agreed to help me get a job’? Is this OK or should it be ‘Vocational counselor, Jane Smith, has agreed to help me get a job’?” Well, Mary, yes in one case but no in another.


What Is an Appositive?


Before we get into the details of this fairly complicated topic, we need to find out what an appositive is. It’s a noun or a noun phrase that is placed next to another noun or noun phrase to help identify it (1). So at the beginning of this episode, I said, “a listener, Mary, raised this topic.” In this sentence, the subject is “a listener.” The name Mary is an appositive.


Essential or Extra?


Appositives can be essential information or extra information. Only appositives that are extra information get commas. The question now is whether the name Mary is essential or extra. The rule for appositives is that if the information is essential, you don’t use commas. If it is extra, you use extra commas (2). Remember: extra information, extra commas.


I’m sorry to tell you, Mary, but your name was not essential; that is why it was surrounded with commas. Of course your name is essential to you, but it’s not essential to that sentence. The sentence was about the fact that a listener—one of many—had a question about appositives. You could leave out the appositive and the sentence would still convey the same thought: “A listener raised this topic.”


Now, if this podcast had only one listener, the story would be different. If Mary were the only listener, and we're glad she's not, then the sentence would have to go like this: “Listener Mary asked about appositives.” It would be incorrect to put commas around her name because her name is essential identifying information. You couldn’t delete the appositive in this case because the sentence would not make sense. You couldn’t say, “Listener asked about appositives.”


Two Examples Explained


So let’s look at Mary’s example of the vocational counselor. It’s going to seem a bit confusing at first, but if you remember the phrase “extra information, extra commas,” then you should be able to get it. In fact, this might be a good episode to read again at the website. I’ll put up a variety of extra examples there.


Anyway, Mary suggested two different ways to express her thought about the vocational counselor. First was “A vocational counselor, Jane Smith, has agreed to help me get a job.” Second was “Vocational counselor, Jane Smith, has agreed to help me get a job.”


The first one, which starts with “A vocational counselor,” is a little tricky 2 because there are two ways to interpret it. The first way is that “Jane Smith” is the subject and you’re giving extra information by telling us what her job is. “A vocational counselor” is therefore an appositive and it’s extra information. If they were in the middle of a sentence, the words “A vocational counselor” would be surrounded by commas, but since the phrase is at the beginning, you put only one comma, after the word “counselor.” The sentence therefore reads “A vocational counselor, Jane Smith has agreed to help me get a job.” You could delete the information about her job and it would still make sense: “Jane Smith has agreed to help me get a job.”


The second way to interpret this first example is that the subject is “A vocational counselor” and the appositive is her name. Then her name is extra information that needs to be surrounded by commas, so the sentence reads “A vocational counselor, Jane Smith, has agreed to help me get a job.” You could delete her name and the sentence would still make sense: “A vocational counselor has agreed to help me get a job.”


So you can see that either way is correct, depending on your interpretation 3 of which is more important: that Jane Smith agreed to help you or that a vocational counselor agreed to help you.


The second vocational counselor example is easier. Thank goodness! Her example was actually incorrect. You can’t say, “Vocational counselor, Jane Smith, has agreed to help me get a job” because in this case the appositive, her name, is essential information. No commas needed. “Vocational counselor Jane Smith” is one job title, as is Inspector 4 Jacques Clouseau of “Pink Panther” fame.


Appositives can be tricky, and commas are always tricky, so when faced with an appositive, you need to ask yourself: “essential or extra?” If the appositive is extra information and can be deleted without changing the meaning of the sentence, then you use commas. If it’s essential, then you don’t use commas. Remember that extra information needs extra commas. Be sure to check out some other examples at quickanddirtytips.com.


Administrative 5


This podcast was written by Bonnie Trenga, author of The Curious Case of the Misplaced Modifier, who blogs at sentencesleuth.blogspot.com, and I'm Mignon Fogarty, the author of the paperback 6 book Grammar Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing.


Finally, if you'd like to submit a question for the Grammar Girl show, the voicemail line is 206-338-4475 and the email address is...


That's all. Thanks for listening.


 



n.顾问,法律顾问
  • The counselor gave us some disinterested advice.顾问给了我们一些无私的忠告。
  • Chinese commercial counselor's office in foreign countries.中国驻国外商务参赞处。
adj.狡猾的,奸诈的;(工作等)棘手的,微妙的
  • I'm in a rather tricky position.Can you help me out?我的处境很棘手,你能帮我吗?
  • He avoided this tricky question and talked in generalities.他回避了这个非常微妙的问题,只做了个笼统的表述。
n.解释,说明,描述;艺术处理
  • His statement admits of one interpretation only.他的话只有一种解释。
  • Analysis and interpretation is a very personal thing.分析与说明是个很主观的事情。
n.检查员,监察员,视察员
  • The inspector was interested in everything pertaining to the school.视察员对有关学校的一切都感兴趣。
  • The inspector was shining a flashlight onto the tickets.查票员打着手电筒查看车票。
adj.行政的,管理的
  • The administrative burden must be lifted from local government.必须解除地方政府的行政负担。
  • He regarded all these administrative details as beneath his notice.他认为行政管理上的这些琐事都不值一顾。
n.平装本,简装本
  • A paperback edition is now available at bookshops.平装本现在在书店可以买到。
  • Many books that are out of print are reissued in paperback form.许多绝版的书籍又以平装本形式重新出现。
学英语单词
a fence
a.k
abannition
acroleic acid esterification
active site theory
adjusted bank balance of cash
air vent valve
ambiguous name of ship
bouquiniste
callop
Carlsbad turn
Cobamyde
codesets
commonality.
cooperators
core sequence
cornucopiae
cortex
cross-bedded structure
crumbled tobacco
current protection
cyclic nucleotides
deseret pk.
dodecaphony
egg plate
elimation
emberless
EMXA
endothelial cancer
exclusive service tariff
extension type
fireproof cable
gasoducts
group refraction index
heezy
house line
HSVE
inferior lateral cutaneous nerve of arm
insomniac
ipecacuanha
isodiametrical
It is no use
karpiloff
kmetia pouzolziae
knife-handles
koinotropy
la asuncion
linearity of cone surface
liver-function
low-input
Marshallton
meetness
mercury breaker
message data type
mucus layer
mycotrophy
mzungu
negative reporting
Nizhnyaya Veduga
old-clothes-men
on going project
on-balance-sheet item
one big happy family
one-and-a-half-hour
order filicaless
paraneoplasia
pautrier
Pedilanthus tithymaloides
perforating feed
periodic blow down
Perutz
pin-vice
pishi
plane stress fracture
play houses
pleurotrochantin
ptychodium
rehomer
reversed pallet
riser mandrel
rough shedding
saunape
scaphocalanus longifurca
scigliano
self-division
shinigami
simple capillary hemangioma
speed adjusting circuit
station-service
Steak and Kidney
sun roses
tandem queues
teaching sociology
trademark registration administration
transition intensity
tremadog b. (tremadoc b.)
Tropfen
Vieta
warranty for goods purchased
wartless
Winner's Curse
Your humble servant