Preposition, adverb, and adjective

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Then what would you call 'below' in 'the sentence below'?
 
Adjective. It describes "sentence".
 
'Above' can be used... as an adverb (without a following noun).
***** NOT A TEACHER *****


Thank you for the link.

Some grammarians would parse "above" as an adverb, for some grammarians believe that it is short for "the stars which are above."

In such a sentence, many grammarians point out that "are" is not a linking verb. It means something like "to exist." (For example, Shakespeare's famous "To be or not to be.")
 
To Parser, this thread is about preposition's connection with adjective and adverb in case you didn't know.



***** NOT A TEACHER *****



Thank you for your note.

I had worked very hard to find that information.

I apologize that I misunderstood what you wanted.

From now on, I shall not bother you with my humble comments.
 
It makes little sense to me to rewrite a sentence and then parse the words as if it were the original.

In "To be or not to be", "to be" is not a verb at all; it is an infinitive.
 
***** NOT A TEACHER *****



Thank you for your note.

I had worked very hard to find that information.

I apologize that I misunderstood what you wanted.

From now on, I shall not bother you with my humble comments.

I love your infos though so if you want you can keep on.
 
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"Above" might also be an adjectival post modifier so both might be right.
 
In "To be or not to be", "to be" is not a verb at all; it is an infinitive.

Even though it is an infinitive, to me they have the same meaning/definition but one is acting like a verb and the other is acting like a noun.
 
I found an example which seems to agree with TheParser's post.
'Above can be used... as an adverb (without a following noun): She stared up at the stars above.'── quoted from http://www.macmillandictionary.com/dictionary/british/above (boldface in red is mine)

Not a teacher.

She stared [up] [at the stars] [above].

1. She stared [up].
2. She stared [at the stars].
3. She stared [above].

Well, my guess is that those words in brackets function adverbially - they all modify the verb 'stared'.

I'm not a grammarian!
 
I don't think 'above' modifies 'stared', which is already modified by 'up', but I am not a teacher.
 
I don't see "above" as an adverb in "the book above".
I think MikeNewYork's point is that the modifier of a noun should not be an adverb.

..."the stars which are above."
In such a sentence, many grammarians point out that "are" is not a linking verb. It means something like "to exist."
I think their point is that 'are' is the main verb modified by the adverb 'above'.

I consider both points possible, but I am not a teacher.

From now on, I shall not bother you with my humble comments.
Your 'bothering' comments have in fact helped many learners.

Thank you for the link.
You are welcome.
 
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That's only my guess, Matthew.

:)
 
She stared [up] [at the stars] [above].

1. She stared [up].
2. She stared [at the stars].
3. She stared [above].

Well, my guess is that those words in brackets function adverbially - they all modify the verb 'stared'.

I'm not a grammarian!

I think if those sentences were separate like the way you list them, I would agree.
 
I think their point is that 'are' is the main verb modified by the adverb 'above'.


***** NOT A TEACHER *****


That is, indeed, what many reputable grammarians believe.

One expert explains:

1. "Those hills up ahead aren't mountains." ("up ahead" is an adverb phrase.)

a. It is a shorter version of "Those hills which are up ahead aren't mountains." (Only my note: "Those mountains which exist up ahead aren't mountains.")

Source: Constance Weaver, Grammar for Teachers (1979).


2. Four famous experts give this example:

"The people behind were talking all the time."

a. According to those four experts, there are two explanations:

i. "The people who were sitting behind were talking all the time." (They say "behind" is an adverb here.)
ii. "The people who were sitting behind [us] were talking all the time." (They explain that "behind" is a preposition with an omitted object.)


Source: Quirk et al., page 1293.
 
2. Four famous experts give this example:

"The people behind were talking all the time."

a. According to those four experts, there are two explanations:

i. "The people who were sitting behind were talking all the time." (They say "behind" is an adverb here.)
ii. "The people who were sitting behind [us] were talking all the time." (They explain that "behind" is a preposition with an omitted object.)

I think the prepositional phrase is working like an adverb even though you are correct.
 
I can't see any prepositional phrase in the quote, but I am not a teacher.

"behind us" is a prepositional phrase from what I know but I might be wrong.

not a teacher.
 
'Behind us' is a prepositional phrase but 'us' seems to have been omitted from the example.

Not a teacher.
 
'Behind us' is a prepositional phrase but 'us' seems to have been omitted from the example.

Not a teacher.

Yeah, that's why I think they both act like an adverb.
 
"Behind (us)" defines "people"; therefore, it is adjectival.
 
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