Kindly R-K "jobs cleaning up"

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TheParser

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Would you kindly R-K this sentence:

Unemployed people along the Gulf of Mexico are being given

jobs cleaning up the beaches.

Thank you very much. I do not know whether "cleaning" is a

participle or a gerund following a deleted preposition. Thanks for

any help.
 

Frank Antonson

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I think it could be either.

"...cleaning jobs..." or "...jobs of cleaning..."
 

TheParser

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I think it could be either.

"...cleaning jobs..." or "...jobs of cleaning..."

(1) Thank you SO much for your kind reply.

(2) Just in case you get a really clever student next term who

asks a similar question, I wanted to share something with you.

(You have helped me so much over the months that I feel a sense

of gratitude.) An extremely experienced ESL teacher told me that

probably it would be best to parse "cleaning up the beaches"

as a complement to "jobs." In other words, a gerund used as an object

complement. That"s how I shall R-K that sentence. Thanks again. I bet

your top-notch students will be serving up a lot of challenging questions.

Thanks.:)
 

Frank Antonson

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Unemployed people along the Gulf of Mexico are being given

jobs cleaning up the beaches.

Do you mean "cleaning up the beaches" is duplicating "jobs" and therefore an appositive? I could see that.
 

TheParser

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Unemployed people along the Gulf of Mexico are being given

jobs cleaning up the beaches.

Do you mean "cleaning up the beaches" is duplicating "jobs" and therefore an appositive? I could see that.

Actually one teacher did call it an appositive. But that other very

experienced teacher called it an objective complement. That is, the

gerund phrase "cleaning up the beaches" is a complement of "jobs."

That's how I shall diagram it. I think that Messrs. Reed and Kellogg

would be proud of us. :)
 

Frank Antonson

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Sorry, I don't see an objective complement.

The sentence I use as an example of an objective complement is "The turned the apples red". "The sun made the plums prunes" would also work. In both cases you could insert the words "to be". I don't see a similar situation with your sentence. Objective complements are only produced by certain verbs -- much the same way that indirect objects are only produced by certain verbs.
 

TheParser

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Sorry, I don't see an objective complement.

The sentence I use as an example of an objective complement is "The turned the apples red". "The sun made the plums prunes" would also work. In both cases you could insert the words "to be". I don't see a similar situation with your sentence. Objective complements are only produced by certain verbs -- much the same way that indirect objects are only produced by certain verbs.

Excellent point. I think that many learners are amazed that people

differ on how to analyze some sentences. Some learners have said that

in their languages there is one "right" way. Maybe we need an official

Academy of the English Language!!!:)
 

Frank Antonson

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Excellent point. I think that many learners are amazed that people

differ on how to analyze some sentences. Some learners have said that

in their languages there is one "right" way. Maybe we need an official

Academy of the English Language!!!:)

I meant "The SUN turned the apples red." I forgot the word "sun".

I am afraid that such an academy would end up doing prescriptive as opposed to descriptive work.
 

TheParser

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I meant "The SUN turned the apples red." I forgot the word "sun".

I am afraid that such an academy would end up doing prescriptive as opposed to descriptive work.

Thank you for your kind note.

(1) I am a proud prescriptivist. I have also found that learners are,

too. It gives them -- and me -- a sense of confidence and

security. :)

(2) I have been googling and found many interesting viewpoints

regarding gerunds as objective complements. Here is something from

one professor:

But who ever heard of them eating an owl?

The good professor says eating an owl is an -ing participle clause

standing in apposition to the pronoun, and sharing with it the

functional position of object of a preposition.

Then the good professor gives this sentence:

I don't like them eating owls.

He says that them is a direct object, and the -ing participle clause

functions as an object complement.

No wonder ordinary people like me are so confused.

(3) Hope your preparations for opening day of school are coming along

well.

Thank you.
 

Frank Antonson

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"I don't like THEIR eating owls" would solve the problem, but I see what you mean about an object complement. I guess it works. I am a bit rusty on them right now.

For me, language is way too alive and complicated to prescribe it. I prefer to try to describe it. I doubt if Shakespeare could have thrived in a prescriptivist world. Then, there is the whole matter of what linguists call register.
 

Isafroward

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(1) Thank you SO much for your kind reply.

(2) Just in case you get a really clever student next term who

asks a similar question, I wanted to share something with you.

(You have helped me so much over the months that I feel a sense

of gratitude.) An extremely experienced ESL teacher told me that

probably it would be best to parse "cleaning up the beaches"

as a complement to "jobs." In other words, a gerund used as an object

complement. That"s how I shall R-K that sentence. Thanks again. I bet

your top-notch students will be serving up a lot of challenging questions.

Thanks.:)

Here are the steps I would go through with my students:

Unemployed people along the Gulf of Mexico are being given jobs cleaning up the beaches.

What is the complete verb? --> are being given
Who or what are being given? --> Unemployed people (along the gulf of Mexico)
[A]re being given what or whom? --> jobs
What question does cleaning up the beaches answer? --> what kind of jobs?
If it answers what kind, we know that the part of speech is what? --> adjective
If it's an adjective, it modifies a noun. What noun? --> jobs
Does the adjective look like a verb but act like an adjective? --> yes
Then the phrase is participial, modifying the noun jobs

This is where I would arrive. What do you think of this interpretation?

Dea
 

TheParser

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Thank you so much. As your students probably tell you:

That's awesome!!!
 
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