Hello Teachers,
I have a sentence as follow.
"It takes years to rebuild this city's infrastructure."
What is the subject of the sentence?
Thanks in advance.
Hi everyone,
Thanks for your comment.
Reflecting to my learning experience, I have learnt that "It" is an empty subject. So the real subject is the one that stays behind the verb.
"It takes years to rebuild the city's infrastructure." or
"To rebuild the city's infrastructure takes years."
The real subject would be "To build the city's infrastructure".
Please help correct me if i am wrong.
Thank you very much.
The grammatical subject is 'it'.
Some linguists, however, find it useful to distinguish a so-called 'semantic subject', which is here the complemental infinitive phrase to which the speaker is referring.
Hello Teachers,
I have a sentence as follow.
"It takes years to rebuild this city's infrastructure."
What is the subject of the sentence?
Thanks in advance.
Hmm, this looks interesting. Where exactly have you learned that? Do you have references?
In principle I would stick with the other posters and say the subject of your original sentence is simply "it". I don't see any problem with that. In your second example you have paraphrased the sentence, so it is another sentence with another subject.
What do you mean by "behind the verb" ?
Using your "system" what would be the subject of the sentence "it's raining" ?
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