0
Tkacka15 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

How to get himself out of it

He doesn't seem to know how to get himself out of it.


Is how to get himself out of it a non-finite clause of manner functioning as a complement of the verb "to know" in the sentence above?

  

Top answer

The group of words, "how to get himself out of it", functions as a noun, and as such is the direct object of the infinitive "to know" here. " Here it functions as the subject of the sentence.

  • The group of words, "how to get himself out of it", functions as a noun, and as such is the direct object of the infinitive "to know" here.
  • " Here it functions as the subject of the sentence.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0

The group of words, "how to get himself out of it", functions as a noun, and as such is the direct object of the infinitive "to know" here. You can see this better if you use "how to get himself out of it" as a noun in another situation: "How to get himself out of it was the question on his mind." Here it functions as the subject of the sentence.

0
tkacka15Is how to get himself out of it a non-finite clause of manner functioning as a complement of the verb "to know" in the sentence above?

It's a complement of 'know', but it's a non-finite interrogative content clause. I'm not sure how you came up with 'clause of manner'; it doesn't tell us the manner in which the subject seems to know. The 'how' bel

Related Questions