Noun phrases
Postmodification
We can make a sentence more complex by putting more information into it. Here
are four simple sentences:
- This painting represents women. (noun)
- The women are ancestral. (adjective)
- The women are of this particular tribe.
(preposition phrase)
- The women are sitting in the shade of a tree.
(participle clause)
All this information can be contained in one sentence. For example:
This painting represents
|
ancestral
|
women
|
of this particular tribe
|
sitting in the shade of a tree.
|
|
Adjective |
Noun |
Preposition phrase |
Participle clause |
We cannot change the order of these elements.
- This painting represents ancestral women
sitting in the shade of a tree of this particular tribe.
- This painting represents women ancestral
of this particular tribe sitting in the shade of a tree.
To show another example, look at these sentences:
- Sarathbabu was inspired by his mother. (participle clause)
- His mother worked very hard. (adverb)
- Sarathbabu was inspired by his mother while he was growing up. (preposition phrase)
- He grew up in a tiny thatch-roofed hut. (preposition phrase)
- He was surrounded by poverty while growing up. (participle clause)
- Sarathbabu dreams of creating employment and enabling people to fend for themselves. (clause)
All this information can be packed into the following sentence:
Inspired by his hard-working mother while growing up in a tiny thatch-roofed hut and surrounded by poverty, Sarathbabu now dreams of creating employment and enabling over 100,000 people in India to fend for themselves.