Non-finite clause
Type of clause in grammar / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In linguistics, a non-finite clause is a dependent or embedded clause that represents a state or event in the same way no matter whether it takes place before, during, or after text production.[1] In this sense, a non-finite dependent clause represents one process as a circumstance for another without specifying the time when it takes place as in the following examples:
- Non-Finite Dependent Clauses
- I'm going to Broadway to watch a play.
- I went to Broadway to watch a play.
- Finite Dependent Clauses
- I'm going to Broadway so I can watch a play.
- I went to Broadway so I could watch a play.
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Similarly, a non-finite embedded clause represents a qualification for something that is being represented as in the following examples:[2]
- Non-Finite Embedded Clauses
- I'm on a street called Bellevue Avenue.
- I was on a street called Bellevue Avenue.
- Finite Embedded Clauses
- I'm on a street that is called Bellevue Avenue.
- I'm on a street that used to be called Bellevue Avenue.
- I was on a street that is called Bellevue Avenue.
- I was on a street that used to be called Bellevue Avenue.
In meaning-independent descriptions of language, a non-finite clause is a clause whose verbal chain is non-finite;[3] for example, using Priscian's categories for Latin verb forms, in many languages we find texts with non-finite clauses containing infinitives, participles and gerunds. In such accounts, a non-finite clause usually serves a grammatical role – commonly that of a noun, adjective, or adverb – in a greater clause that contains it.[4]