He is home.
I always thought a linking verb must be followed by adjective or noun (below):
He is happy.
He is a general.
Could a linking verb be followed by an adverb?
Thank you.
[QUOTE=Lucky;807628]He is home.
I always thought a linking verb must be followed by adjective or noun (below):
NOT A TEACHER
(1) May I suggest that "is" in "He is home" is not a linking verb.
(2) As you know, sometimes "to be" is a "real" verb that means something like to
exist. You remember Shakespeare's famous "To be or not to be." That is, to exist/live
or not.
(3) As the Editor said, the perfect sentence (according to the rules) is "He is at home." It answers the question: Where is he? (Which "proves" that the "is" in your sentence is not a linking verb.) Of course, many speakers delete (drop) the "at" in ordinary conversation and ordinary writing.
***
(4) In "He went home," the noun "home" is being used as an adverb to modify a verb
of motion. This is one of those exceptions that you find in any language.
Last edited by TheParser; 05-Oct-2011 at 09:50.
[QUOTE=Lucky;807996]
NOT A TEACHER
(1) IMHO, you are 100% correct about your sentence.
(2) Regarding your second statement, you are again 99.99% correct. As Professors
House and Harman's book taught me: occasionally a linking verb is followed by a
prepositional phrase. Consider:
(a) The teacher is in his office. ( A full verb, similar to your sentence.)
(b) The teacher is in a very bad mood. (A prepositional phrase acting like
an adjective. Maybe something like: the teacher is upset/angry/etc.)
(Both sentences come from the professors' Descriptive English Grammar. I changed the
second sentence slightly.)
NOT A TEACHER
There is also some guidance on this site:
Copular Verbs « English Practice – Learn and Practice English Online
[QUOTE=TheParser;808025]Once again, thank you (and you too Curt Jugg). Thank you also for sharing insight on prepositional phrase acting as predicate adjective.
What if I were to rewrite your sentence:
The teacher's mood is very bad.
Now, we have a linking verb followed by adjective. But, I still like your example better. Thanks.