CLEFT SENTENCE

CLEFT SENTENCE. A construction in which a simple SENTENCE is divided into two clauses so as to give prominence to a particular linguistic item and the information it carries. The sentence On Monday the players objected to the delay can be restated as any of three cleft sentences: (1) With the focus on the players: It was the players who/that objected on Monday to the delay. (2) With the focus on the delay: It was the delay that the players objected to on Monday. (3) With the focus on Monday: It was on Monday that the players objected to the delay. The first clause of a cleft sentence consists of It, a form of the verb be, and the focused item. The rest is a relative clause. A similar device is found in the pseudo-cleft sentence, where the subject is generally a nominal relative clause, the verb is a form of the verb be, and the focused item follows at the end: What I badly need is a good rest (based on I badly need a good rest). Unlike the cleft sentence, the pseudo-cleft sentence can have a verb (and other elements that follow it) as the focused item: What we did was replace all the carpets. Similar are sentences in which a pronoun or noun phrase with general reference is used instead of the nominal relative clause: Something I badly need is a good rest. The thing we did was replace the carpets.

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TOM McARTHUR. "CLEFT SENTENCE." Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 1998. Encyclopedia.com. 29 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

TOM McARTHUR. "CLEFT SENTENCE." Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 1998. Encyclopedia.com. (May 29, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O29-CLEFTSENTENCE.html

TOM McARTHUR. "CLEFT SENTENCE." Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 1998. Retrieved May 29, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O29-CLEFTSENTENCE.html

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