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Abbas Rajabpour Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Somebody

Somebody or such pronouns are called indefinite pronouns and I am well aware of the fact that we must use a third person verb after them, but when it comes to asking it seems to have a different grammar, can u talk about that?

I.E:

Somebody give me a hand.

  

Top answer

" This is not a question, but an imperative clause, where "give" is a plain form verb as head of the infinitival verb phrase "give me a hand". Incidentally, despite what you may have read, "somebody" is not a pronoun but a compound determinative consisting of "some + body". It occurs as a fused determiner-head with the syntactic fusion of the two functions, determiner + head.

  • " This is not a question, but an imperative clause, where "give" is a plain form verb as head of the infinitival verb phrase "give me a hand".
  • Incidentally, despite what you may have read, "somebody" is not a pronoun but a compound determinative consisting of "some + body".
  • It occurs as a fused determiner-head with the syntactic fusion of the two functions, determiner + head.
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1 Answers
0

"Somebody give me a hand."

This is not a question, but an imperative clause, where "give" is a plain form verb as head of the infinitival verb phrase "give me a hand".

Incidentally, despite what you may have read, "somebody" is not a pronoun but a compound determinative consisting of "some + body".

It occurs as a fused determiner-head with the syntactic fusion of the two fun

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