Games For English Language Learning & Teaching

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    Games for English Language Learning & TeachingWord Prompts (Team A Team B) Students from Team (B) have to guess the words onyour LIST. Before each guess, say a word which will help Team (B) to guess correctly.Students from Team (A) have to guess the words on your LIST. Before each guess, say aword which will help Team (A) to guess correctly.YOUR LIST (Team B must guess) YOUR LIST (Team A must guess)

    A1 horse

    B1 carA2 windowB2 Big BenA3 elephant

    B3 cup

    A4 EnglandB4 floorA5 teacherB5 kangaroo

    A6 London

    B6 lemonA7 riverB7 RussiaA8 book

    B8 ice cream

    A9 Bill ClintonB9 Micky MouseA10 karateB10 bath

    02 Kim's game (longer & longer lists)In my [pocket] [shopping bag] [house] [garden] [country] [dream],there is / are / was /wereThe teacher imposes the necessary restrictions according to the vocabulary area)I packed my bag and in it I put:an X (longer & longer list)an X and some Ys.

    an X, some Ys, a Z, an ___ and some _____s(As you go round the class each student has to recite the existing list and add an item inthe same category).

    03 Guessing nouns via "Is it + adjective" questions Guessing Games: Vocabulary.Questions with ADJECTIVESGroup A Questions to ask opposingteam(s)1. chair Ask YES/NO questions:2. bus Is it big / round /square /

    rectangular?3. head Is there one in this room?4. bicycle Can we eat it?5. computer Is it made of wood /plastic / metal?6. chocolate Ask your own questions

    Group B Questions to ask opposingteam(s)1. tree Ask YES/NO questions:2. shoe Is it

    small/yellow/light/dark/circular?3. tea Have you one in yourhouse / country?4. knife Do you like it?5. finger Is it used every day?6. button Ask your own questions

    Group C Questions to ask opposingteam(s)1. bra Ask YES/NO questions:2. pen Is it larger than a chair?

    3. mouse Can I see one now?4. coffee Do you find it indoors oroutdoors?5. jumbo jet Are there a lot of themin this school?6. mobile phone Ask your ownquestions:

    Group D Questions to ask opposingteam(s)1. cat Ask YES/NO questions:

    2. house Is it hard / soft / high / ta/ low ?3. gate Is it liquid or solid?4. guitar Do I see one every day?5. sugar Have you got one in yourhouse / with you?6. washing machine Ask your ownquestions:

    04 Spanish merchant: guess the connection (I can sell + LIST)Ss: I'm a Spanish merchant and I can sell (camcorders) (compact disks) (televisions).

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    T: That's right. You can.Ss: I'm a Spanish merchant and I can sell (steam engines) (saucepans) (guitars)T: No you can't.CONNECTION: Invented after 1900.Other possible restrictions1. objects must begin with the same letter as the S's first name.2. objects must begin with the same letter as the first name of S on the right of speaker.3. must be in the room

    4. must be made of special material / must include wood or metal5. must be objects you can grow.Instructions Each student has a turn of saying "I'm a Spanish merchant and I cansell...."The person who knows the connection (T or S) gives feedback (Yes, you can or No, youcan't.The students must guess the connection. Either call it out or write it down after areasonable number of examples have been given.

    05 Comparisons: How is XXX like YYY? Finding Connections (Word Fields and

    Adjective ComparisonsGroup A How is XXX like YYY? How does XXX differ from YYY? X YX Y1. milk cheese 2. computer television 3. caf restaurant 4. umbrellasunshadeGroup B How is XXX like YYY? How does XXX differ from YYY? X Y X Y1. kettle teapot 2. moustache beard 3. doctor dentist 4. cookerfridgeGroup C How is XXX like YYY? How does XXX differ from YYY? X Y X Y1. horse dog 2. sock stocking 3. beer whisky 4. wristwatch

    egg-timerGroup D How is XXX like YYY? How does XXX differ from YYY? X Y X Y1. ice snow 2. chemist pharmacist 3. dictionary encyclopaedia 4.record compact disk

    06 BLIP (sometimes known as COFFEE POT) Guess the verbEach student is given a VERB. (See that it is suitable for the level of the class).In pairs or as a whole class, discover the VERB through QUESTIONS.The nonsense word "BLIP" should be substituted for the target VERB.

    Write sample QUESTIONS on the boardWhen / Where / Why / How do you blip?Can you blip someone / something /somewhere?Do you often blip?Did you blip yesterday?Are you blipping now?Are you going to blip this weekend?

    Have you blipped since you arrived inEngland?Do you like blipping?Do you blip with your hands?If I saw you blipping, would you beembarrassed?

    The aim of the game is not to guess the meaning of the word "Blip" straight away. Whenyou think you know the meaning of the word "Blip", you could ask further questions which

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    make the meaning of the word "Blip" clear to the rest of the class or which amuse thestudent who is answering the questions.

    Sample Verbscook / live / cry / love / danceread / draw / run / dream / shoutdrink / sing / drive / sleep / eatswim / fight / talk / fish / think

    fly / undress / jump / worry / kissargue / paint / bathe / plan / complain

    rest / diet / scream / explore / sewfidget / smile / translate / hesitate /understandiron / vacuum / joke / whisper / knit

    win / move / yell / oversleep / zigzag

    07 Guess the ADVERBOne student goes out of the room. The rest of the class think of an adverb or the teacherselects one and writes it on the board for everybody to see. It is rubbed off the boardbefore the student outside returns.The returned student asks a variety of questions to different students. They all answer inthe manner suggested by the adverb.Alternatively, the returned student can ask members of the class to do things. They then

    have to perform the actions in the manner suggested by the adverb.After hearing a sample of answers or observing a sample of actions performed by differentstudents, the student who originally left the classroom is then asked to guess the adverb.

    quickly slowly noisily quietly angrilypolitely sadly happily sleepily shylyloudly rudely drunkenly nervouslyromantically

    confidently anxiously hesitantly calmllovinglydoubtfully ungrammatically warmlycoldly timidly

    08 The Preposition GameThe teacher thinks of a room of a house and a hiding-place in which to hide an object.

    (1) I've hidden YOUR BIRTHDAY PRESENT and today is YOUR BIRTHDAY!Ss: Have you put it __________________________?(2) I hid my mother's Christmas present LAST CHRISTMAS!Ss: Did you put it ____________________________?(3) I'm going to hide my brother's Christmas present NEXT CHRISTMAS!Ss: Are you going to put it ________________________?(4) EVERY CHRISTMAS, my uncle hides my present!Ss: Does he put it ________________________________?Practise different tenses. A student can choose a hiding-place and the rest of the class canask the questions. Alternatively, students can work in pairs.

    09 Observing the classroomSeat TWO students at the front of the class facing the white/black board with the otherstudents looking on. The two students are both given a chance to answer each questionand they are awarded points for correct answers.Sample Questions1. How many windows / tables / chairs / students are there?2. What are their names?3. Who is sitting next to Z / between X and Y / opposite X / on the left / on the right?4. What is (s)he wearing? / What colour is Z's shirt.Alternatively, seat students in pairs back to back and issue them with a checklist ofvocabulary for describing physical appearance and clothing:

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    Height tall/short Build well-built Age middle-aged Hair style curlyHair length long Eyes large-eyed Shape of head oval Complexion freshArticle of clothing Material Pattern Colourshirt / skirt etc dark green plain /checked light blueAsk them to describe each other using suitable words from each category.I spy with my little eye - something beginning with + letter ABC

    The objects sighted must be in view of all the students in the classroom.

    10 Simon says (Action verbs + Parts of the body)Students should only obey the commands if you preface each one with Simon says. If youomit the preface Simon says any student who obeys the command can no longerparticipate in the game. The last student to remain in the game is the winner.imon says: "hands up", "hands down", "thumbs up", "thunbs down", "fingers up", "fingersdown".Simon says: "touch your eyes / ears / nose / mouth with the forefinger / middle finger / ringfinger / little finger / of your (right)(left) hand.Simon says: "put your right hand / left hand / both hands on your right / left knee."

    Simon says: "shut / open your eyes", "stand up / sit down", "stand on your right / left leg".Simon says: "bend your knees / body", "straighten your knees / body".Simon says: "fold your arms", "put your arms by your side".Simon says: "wave your right hand", "STOP", "jump up and down", "STOP".Simon says: "point at the ceiling / floor with the forefinger/ middle finger / ring finger / littlefinger / of your right / left hand.

    11 TELEGRAMS / MESSAGES / ANAGRAMSTELEGRAMS / MESSAGESEach student tries to write a telegram (or short e-mail message!) using the letters of theirname as the initial letters of the words e.g. TED = Treasure Every Day.

    Place-names can also be used:LONDON: Living On Nothing Drives One Nuts.ENGLAND: Every Nice Girl Loves A Non-alcoholic Drink.TOKYO: Thinking Of Kissing Yoko Ono.JAPAN: Jokes About Politicians Are Normal.STOCKHOLM: Sexy Toyoto Owners Can Kiss Happily On London MotorwaysSWEDEN: Sociable Women Eat Doughnuts Every NightANAGRAMSAs an alternative to a straight spelling test, the words can be given with jumbled letters:CESANSYRE IRDAO VITLSEENOI OOCKRE TNEHCKI STTE

    HANGMAN This is a popular game. It is very useful at low levels and the words whichstudents have to guess can be restricted to areas of vocabulary (i.e. themes or semanticsets) or new words introduced in a particular lesson.

    12 Find your partner (Stick self adhesive labels to Ss' backs)The teacher prepares SELF-ADHESIVE TYPEWRITER ADDRESS LABELS ( which can bepurchased in rolls to stick on the backs of all the students in the class.Each label contains a real person's name or the name of a character from fiction ortelevision cartoons. Each named person should have a natural partner, for example if you

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    write a label with the name ROMEO, there should also be a label with the name JULIETstuck on somebody's back. If you have an odd number of students in your class, stick alabel on your own back, but let the students do the questioning.Questions must be of the type that can either be answered with YES or No:Am I man or a woman? Alive or dead? European or American? Real or fictitious?Am I a character from a cartoon or a book? Am I rich? Am I famous?Have I been in the news recently? Am I someone from your country? Britain?Do I work in sport / music / entertainment / the cinema / the theatre?

    ROMEO JULIET TOM the cat JERRY the mousePOPEYE OLIVE OIL Prince Philip Queen Elizabeth IIMicky Mouse Minnie Mouse Stan Laurel Oliver HardyKing Juan Carlos Queen Sofia Andr Agassi Steffi GraffNelson Mandella Winnie Mandella John Lennon Yoko OnoRichard Burton Elizabeth Taylor Bonnie (gangster) Clyde (gangster) Tarzan Jane (jungle girl) The Lone Ranger Tonto (cowboy)Prince Charles Princess Diana Cindarella Prince Charming13 What's my nationality? Who am I?Student (A) thinks of a nationality Student (B) asks: "Do you wear______________?"

    "Do you drink / eat _________ ?""Do you play (sport) or (game)?" "Do you play the (musical instrument)?" "Does itrain / snow a lot there?""Is it very hot / very cold there?" "Do the people like ______ there?""Are the people there tall / short / romantic / hard-working / rich / poor?Student (A) thinks of a famous person, fictitious character or cartoon character?Student (B) asks YES/NO questions as in 12. Find Your Partner.14 What's my job? (from open lists) Guessing games (closed lists)Questions for those guessingDo you work indoors or outdoors? / in a trade or profession? / in a factory or an office?

    Do you work with your hands? Do you wear a uniform? Do you work long hours?Do you work from 9-5? Do you work regular hours? Do you work at weekends?Do you work with people or machines? Are you in a service industry?Do you sell something? Do you earn a lot of money? Must you have good qualifications todo your job?Jobs GROUP 11. police officer 2. nurse 3. farmer 4. shopkeeper 5.scientist 6. artist7. princess 8. dressmaker 9. civil engineer 10. bricklayer 11.caretaker 12. accountantGROUP 2

    1. singer 2. cook 3. secretary 4. student 5. driver6. engineer7. president 8. painter 9. chiropodist 10. fishmonger 11.receptionist 12. mathematicianGROUP 31. actor 2. teacher 3. manager 4. soldier 5.gardener 6. musician7. writer 8. chemist 9. social worker 10. surgeon 11. bee-keeper 12. newsagentGROUP 4

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    1. doctor 2. housewife 3. baker 4. pilot 5. factoryworker 6. cowboy7. builder 8. dentist 9. solicitor 10. secret agent 11.dustman 12. air-hostessMiming lists of jobs: A & B teams Student A chooses ONE of the jobs in Groups 1 and 2above. Student B chooses ONE of the jops in Groups 3 and 4 above. The studentshave to mime their jobs so their partners can guess what they are.15 The hotel receptionist - miming (from Maley & Duff CUP)

    Write a role card for each student in the class giving them a problem which could occurwhile they are staying in a hotel. Buy Maley & Duff's book on Drama in ELT for a list ofsuitable problems. Each student has to mime their problem. The class try to guess theproblem by asking questions, but the student with the problem is not permitted to speak.They can only signal YES or NO. This is a good game for teaching vocabulary in amemorable context. The stranger the problem, the more probable it is that the words willbecome part of the class's active vocabulary.Example of a problem:My wife's wig has fallen down the lift shaft. Can anybody help?The game is also good for supplying the right formulae for difficult situations:I've locked myself out of my room. Have you got a spare key?

    The receptionist can be moved to another environment e.g. a language school, a hospitalor an airport. The TV soap entitled "Airport" shows a good range of the problems that canoccur:A pigeon has flown into the Food Hall and is eating the fruit cake.

    16 The Yes/No Game (from Michael Miles: "Take Your Pick")Different students volunteer to be asked questions. They must avoid saying the words"YES" or "NO" for a given period of time e.g. 1-2 minutes.This is done by using expressions like: "I do", "I am", "that's true", "that isn't true", "that'snot correct", "exactly", "precisely", that's right", "that's correct", "I think so", "probably","possibly", "usually".

    The questioners can try to trap them through deliberate misunderstanding and echoquestions: "Did you say usually? So you said you live in Stuttgart? Perhaps?QuestionsDo you come from Australia? Are you sure you don't?Are you single or married? So you're divorced. You're not interested in marriage?Do you like English food? So you LOVE English food. You think it's the best in the world?Have you been to Florence? So you haven't been to Italy?Which is more important - health or money? You said "health"?How many brothers and sisters do you have? Fifteen?Would you like a million pounds? So you're not interested in money?Are you more intelligent than your parents? So you're less intelligent?

    Did you say you were stupid?Do you like your teacher? Is he / she the best teacher you've ever had?The best in the world?What are your hobbies? So you like listening to folk music?Can you use a computer / play the piano? You can?

    17 Getting a word in (Conversation game) Students work in pairs. Each partner is given astrip of paper with an unusual sentence written on it. They keep this concealed. If possible they tryto learn the sentence off by heart.

    Then they start conversing about any subject, but their real object is to get their given sentenceinto the conversation without their partner realising and before their partner is able to do the same

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    To do this successfully they have to move the topic of conversation towards a context in which thesentence could naturally occur. Sample sentences for strips:1. The farmer was carrying a yellow guitar.2. Elvis Presley was waiting on BrightonStation3.The bottles were full of green milk.4. She kissed him on the nose and went tobed.

    5. The French student wrote twenty loveletters.6. The policeman was dressed in pink shoesand a bow-tie7. The plane landed on the roof of BuckinghamPalace.8. The beauty queen made me a cup of tea.9. The fly took off again and landed on mypillow.

    10 The dog slipped on the banana skin and broke itsleg.11. The water was so deep that the child had to callfor help.12. The king was glad that nobody wanted hisautograph.

    13. He filled the bath with coca cola and started toundress.14. He drank two bottles of vodka and sang "the redflag".15. The elephant attacked the gunman and knockedhim flat.16. She pushed the driving-instructor out of the carand laughed.

    To win the game, you have to continue speaking for a while after getting your sentence into theconversation without being correctly challenged. You can also win by correctly challenging yourpartner as soon as you think they are reciting their sentence. If your challenge s wrong, you lose

    the game. It is therefore good strategy to set traps for your partner by including strange sentencesin the conversation which differ from your given sentence.18 Consequences (Paper & Pencil game)Each student is given an A4 sheet of paper with some fields to fill in. They only fill in ONEfield in order (from the top to the bottom) and fold the sheet over to the next continuousline _____________________________________________________ to hide what they have written.They then pass the paper on to the next student who fills in the next field and fold thepaper over to the next line before handing the sheet to the third student. This continuesuntil all the fields are hidden. The paper is then passed on once again. Each paper willcontain an amusing story (sequence of events). This is read aloud by the student. If thestudent's reading is poor, then the teacher should read the story out again using correct

    intonation and stress to bring out the humour.Name of a man famous or one in your class _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _________________________________________________________metName of a woman famous or one in your class _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ________________________________________________________________________________at / in / onName of a Place _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ________________________________________________________He said to her"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "

    ________________________________________________________She said to him" _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"_________________________________________________________Consequence _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ______________________________________________________________________________

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    19 CHARADES: book / play / song / film / musicalOne or two students agree on the title of a song, a book, a play, a musical, a TVprogramme or a film (Note that films are often given different titles in different countries).They then tell the class how many words there are in the title. If any definite or indefinitearticles occur in the title, the students must tell the class where they occur in the title. Themust also say whether the title is from a song, a book, a play, a musical, a TV programmeor a film. They must not say the name of the title.EXAMPLES (If the students are at a lower level, you can give them the titles)

    Fatal Attraction (2 words) (The title is from a film)Cats (1 word) (The title is from a musical)Gone With The Wind (4 words: the 3rd word is the definite article) (It's from a film)Red is the colour (4 words: 3rd word is the definite article - a song)Starlight Express (2 words) (It's from a musical)Chess (1 word) (It's from a musical)I wanna hold you hand (5 words. 2nd word is slang made up from 2 words: a song)Blowing in the Wind (4 words: the 3rd word is the definite article) (It's from a song)My Bonnie lies over the ocean (6 words: the 5th word is the definite article - a song)Imagine (1 word) (It's from a song)Les Miserables (2 words including the French definite article) (It's from a musical)

    Octopussy (1 word) (It's from a film)From Russia with Love (4 words. It's from a film)Oliver Twist (2 words) (It's from a book)Paperback writer (2 words - a song)EastEnders (1 word with a capital letter in the middle) (It's from a TV program)Tom and Jerry (3 words - a TV programme)Popeye the Sailorman (3 words: 2nd word is the definite article - a TV programme)Neighbours (1 word) (It's from a TV program)Romeo and Juliet (3 words) (It's from a play)A Midsummer Night's Dream (4 words: the 1st word is the indefinite article) (a play)The students who have thought up the title then have to mime it. They can point to any

    REALIA (e.g. maps on the wall) in the classroom. If the game is proving too difficult foreverybody, allow the mimers to sketch on the board or make animal noises, but THEYMUST NOT WRITE or give away any of the words in the title.The other members of the class have to guess the title. You can set a time limit or limit thenumber of guesses. The game is one of co-operation between the students who are miminand those who are guessing. A quick result points either to an easy title to mime or goodparalinguistic communication skills.Some students like to mime every word in the title in consecutive order; others mime whosituations which point to the full title.

    20 20 Questions: Animal, Vegetable or Mineral (Abstract with V connections)

    A student thinks of any object, substance, animal, person or abstract noun and declareswhether it is animal, vegetable, mineral or abstract ("love" would be declared as abstractwith animal connections) (People count as animal!)Phrases which identify a well-known object such as uncle Tom's cabin are permitted.The other students are limited to 20 questions. If they cannot guess the word(s) within theallotted number of questions, then they lose the game. This is a competitive game. Theclass can compete against the teacher, taking equal numbers of turns at selecting theobject or asking the questions, and the TEACHER and STUDENT scores can be recorded onthe board. Teachers should adjust the level of difficulty when it is their turn to selectobjects to make a fairly equal contest.

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    BIBLIOGRAPHYMaley & Duff CUP 1978 repr 1980 Drama Techniques in Language LearningLee,WR OUP Language Teaching Games & Contests

    John threw the ball.

    Here threwis a transitive verb with John as its subject and the ballas its direct object. If we recast

    the verb in the passive voice (was thrown), then the ballbecomes the subject (it ispromotedto the

    subject position) and John disappears:

    The ball was thrown.

    The original subject can typically be re-inserted using the preposition by:

    The ball was thrown by John.

    One non-canonical use of English's passive is to promote an object other than a direct object. It is

    usually possible in English to promote indirect objects as well. For example:

    John gave Mary a book. Mary was given a book.

    In the active form, gave is the verb; John is its subject, Maryits indirect object, and a bookits direct

    object. In the passive form, the indirect object has been promoted and the direct object has been le

    in place. (In "A book was given to Mary," the direct object is promoted and the indirect object left inplace. In this respect, English resembles dechticaetiative languages.)

    It is also possible, in some cases, to promote the object of a preposition:

    They talked about the problem. The problem was talked about.

    In the passive form here, the preposition is "stranded"; that is, it is not followed by an object. (See

    Preposition stranding.) Indeed, in some sense it doesn't have an object, since "the problem" is

    actually the subject of the sentence.

    dechticaetiative language is a language in which the indirect objects ofditransitive verbs are

    treated like the direct objects ofmonotransitive verbs. Etymologically, the first morpheme of the term

    comes from Greek dekhomai"to take, receive"; the second is obscure, but it is remotely possible it

    derives from kaitoi"further, indeed". The term was first introduced by Dr. Edward L. Blansitt, Jr.

    Ditransitive verbs have two arguments other than the subject: a patient that undergoes the action

    and a recipient orbeneficiary that receives the patient (see thematic role). In a dechticaetiative

    language, the recipient of a ditransitive verb is treated in the same way as the single object of a

    http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Promotion_(linguistics)&action=edit&redlink=1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dechticaetiative_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preposition_strandinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indirect_objecthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ditransitive_verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_objecthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monotransitive_verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thematic_rolehttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Promotion_(linguistics)&action=edit&redlink=1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dechticaetiative_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preposition_strandinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indirect_objecthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ditransitive_verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_objecthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monotransitive_verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thematic_role
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    monotransitive verb, and this syntactic category is called primary object. The patient of a

    ditransitive verb is treated separately and called secondary object.

    In dechticaetiative languages with passive constructions, passivation promotes the primary object t

    subject.

    Most dechticaetiative languages are found in Africa, but English arguably contains dechticaetiative

    constructions, traditionally referred to as dative shift. For example, the passive of the sentence John

    gave Mary the ballis Mary was given the ball by John, in which the recipient rather than the patient

    is promoted to subject. This is complicated by the fact that some dialects of English may promote

    either the recipient (Mary) or the patient (the ball) argument to subject status, and for these dialects

    The ball was given Mary by John (meaning that the ball was given to Mary) is also well-formed.

    An object in grammaris a sentence element and part of the sentence predicate. It denotes

    somebody or something involved in the subject's "performance" of the verb. As an example, the

    following sentence is given:

    In the sentence "Bobby kickedthe ball", "ball" is the object.

    "Bobby" is the subject, the doer or performer, while "kick" is the action, and "ball" is the object

    involved in the action.

    The main verb in the sentence determines whether there can or must be objects in the sentence,

    and if so how many and of what type. (See alsoValency (linguistics).) In many languages, however

    including English, the same verb can allow multiple different structures; for example, "Bobby kicked

    "Bobby kicked the ball", and "Bobby kicked me the ball" are all valid English sentences.

    A syntactic verb argument, in linguistics, is a phrase that appears in a relationship with the verb in

    clause. Typical syntactic arguments are the subject and the direct object, which are usually termed

    "core arguments".

    Arguments can be optional or compulsory. The core arguments are compulsory. If a verb has one

    core argument (the subject), it is intransitive; if it has two, it is transitive. Some verbs (like English

    give) have three core arguments (the third is an indirect object). The number of compulsory

    arguments of a verb is called its valency.

    Non-core arguments are also called "oblique arguments" or "complements". They are usually

    adpositional phrases showing time ("in the morning"), location ("at home"), beneficiaries ("for her"),

    etc.

    Core arguments can be suppressed, added, or exchanged in different ways, using voice operations

    like passivization, antipassivization, application, incorporation, etc. Oblique arguments, however,

    can simply be omitted without any grammatical adjustment.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passivehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Africahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dative_shifthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammarhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_elementhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predicate_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valency_(linguistics)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntaxhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguisticshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrasehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clausehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adpositionhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antipassive_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verb_applicativehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incorporation_(linguistics)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passivehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Africahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dative_shifthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammarhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_elementhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predicate_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valency_(linguistics)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntaxhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguisticshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrasehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clausehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_(grammar)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adpositionhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antipassive_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verb_applicativehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incorporation_(linguistics)
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    Nearly all languages mark the core arguments of verbs using case (e.g. Latin), word order(e.g.

    English) or a mixture of both, though some rely heavily on context for disambiguation (e.g. the

    Chinese languages, Japanese, Korean).

    [edit] Semantic verb arguments

    Verb arguments are presented above from the syntactic point of view. However, verbs have

    semantic arguments, which may or may not correspond to the syntactic ones. In actual utterancesonly the syntactic arguments are realized, but the semantic arguments can be inferred from the

    meaning of the proposition.

    Typical semantic arguments are the agent and the patient. Many verbs have other semantic

    arguments. Languages differ regarding which semantic arguments must surface as compulsory

    syntactic arguments.

    For example, in English, the verbputrequires three syntactic arguments: subject, object, locative (e

    g. He put the book in the box). It also has 3 semantic arguments: agent, theme, goal. On the other

    hand, the Japanese verb oku"put" has the same semantic arguments, but the syntactic argumentsdiffer, since Japanese does not require three syntactic arguments, so it is correct to say Kare ga

    hon o oita ("He put the book"). The equivalent sentence in English is ungrammatical without the

    required locative argument.

    The English verb eathas two semantic arguments, the agent (the eater) and the patient (what is

    eaten), but only one required syntactic argument (the subject) and only optionally a second syntact

    argument (the object).

    Most languages allow for impersonal propositions, where the verb can have no syntactic arguments

    (cf Spanish llueve "it rains"). English verbs always require at least one syntactic argument (even if i

    is a dummy it, as in it rains). (See also pro-drop language).

    Voice operations, such as passivization, can change the syntactic argument valency or exchange

    one syntactic argument with another, but the semantic arguments remain as they were. Compare

    the following sentences:

    She ate a cake.

    A cake was eaten by her.

    In both cases the semantic arguments are she (the agent) and a cake (the patient), but the first

    sentence has the syntactic arguments subject and object, while the second has subject and

    (optional) agentive complement.

    The passive voice does exist for a reason, however, and its presence is not always to be despised. The

    passive is particularly useful (even recommended) in two situations:

    When it is more important to draw our attention to the person or thing acted upon:

    The unidentified victim was apparently struck during the early morning hours.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_casehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_orderhttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Verb_argument&action=edit&section=1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semanticshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro-drop_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_voicehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_casehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_orderhttp://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Verb_argument&action=edit&section=1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semanticshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro-drop_languagehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_voice
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    When the actor in the situation is not important: The aurora borealis can be

    observed in the early morning hours.

    The passive voice is especially helpful (and even regarded as mandatory) in scientific or technical

    writing or lab reports, where the actor is not really important but the process or principle being described

    is of ultimate importance. Instead of writing "I poured 20 cc of acid into the beaker," we would write

    "Twenty cc of acid is/was poured into the beaker." The passive voice is also useful when describing,

    say, a mechanical process in which the details of process are much more important than anyone's

    taking responsibility for the action: "The first coat of primer paint is applied immediately after the acid

    rinse."

    We use the passive voice to good effect in a paragraph in which we wish to shift emphasis from what

    was the object in a first sentence to what becomes the subject in subsequent sentences.

    The executive committee approved an entirely new policy for dealing with academic suspension and

    withdrawal. The policy had been written by a subcommittee on student behavior. If students withdraw

    from course work before suspension can take effect, the policy states, a mark of "IW" . . . .

    The paragraph is clearly about this new policy so it is appropriate thatpolicymove from being the objec

    in the first sentence to being the subject of the second sentence. The passive voice allows for this

    transition.

    Passive Verb Formation

    The passive forms of a verb are created by combining a form of the "to be verb" with the past participle

    of the main verb. Other helping verbs are also sometimes present: "The measure could have been kille

    in committee." The passive can be used, also, in various tenses. Let's take a look at the passive forms o

    "design."

    Tense SubjectAuxiliary Past

    ParticipleSingular Plural

    Present The car/cars is are designed.

    Present perfect The car/cars has been have been designed.

    Past The car/cars was were designed.

    Past perfect The car/cars had been had been designed.

    Future The car/cars will be will be designed.

    Future perfect The car/cars will have been will have been designed.

    Present progressive The car/cars is being are being designed.

    Past progressive The car/cars was being were being designed.

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    A sentence cast in the passive voice will not always include an agent of the action. For instance if a

    gorilla crushes a tin can, we could say "The tin can was crushed by the gorilla." But a perfectly good

    sentence would leave out the gorilla: "The tin can was crushed." Also, when an active sentence with an

    indirect object is recast in the passive, the indirect object can take on the role of subject in the passive

    sentence:

    Active Professor Villa gave Jorge an A.

    Passive An A was given to Jorge by Professor Villa.

    Passive Jorge was given an A.

    Only transitive verbs (those that take objects) can be transformed into passive constructions.

    Furthermore, active sentences containing certain verbs cannot be transformed into passive structures.

    To have is the most important of these verbs. We can say "He has a new car," but we cannot say "A

    new car is had by him." We can say "Josefina lacked finesse," but we cannot say "Finesse was lacked."Here is a brief list of such verbs*:

    resemble look like equal agree with

    mean contain hold comprise

    lack suit fit become

    Verbals in Passive Structures

    Verbals or verb forms can also take on features of the passive voice. An infinitive phrase in the

    passive voice, for instance, can perform various functions within a sentence (just like the active forms

    of the infinitive).

    Subject: To be elected by my peers is a great honor.

    Object: That child really likes to be read to by her mother.

    Modifier: Grasso was the first woman to be elected governor in her own right.

    The same is true ofpassive gerunds.

    Subject: Being elected by my peers was a great thrill.

    Object: I really don't like being lectured to by my boss.

    Object of preposition: I am so tired of being lectured to by my boss.

    With passive participles, part of the passive construction is often omitted, the result being a simple

    modifying participial phrase.

    [Having been] designed for off-road performance, the Pathseeker does not always

    behave well on paved highways.

    http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/subjects.htm#agenthttp://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/verbs.htm#verbalshttp://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/phrases.htm#participlehttp://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/subjects.htm#agenthttp://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/verbs.htm#verbalshttp://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/phrases.htm#participle