We use a special kind of verb to join two parts
of a sentence and to
express either that the two parts denote the same thing or that the first has
the property denoted by the second. These verbs are called copulas or copular
verbs.
Common
copular verbs are:be, seem, look, turn, become, appear, sound, smell, taste,feel and get.
·
Alice is my girlfriend. (The sentence
asserts that Alice and my girlfriend are the same person.)
·
Alice is British. (The sentence asserts the
quality of �Britishness� to Alice.)
·
She seems happy.
·
She became famous.
·
It is getting late.
·
The stew smells good.
Adjectives
after copular verbs
Copular verbs are followed by adjectives, not adverbs.
Compare:
·
She spoke intelligently. (Spoke is an ordinary verb. It is
modified by the adverb intelligently.)
·
She looks
intelligent. (Intelligent is
an adjective in predicative position. It tells you about the person herself -
rather like saying She is intelligent. Look is a copular verb.)
Note that some copular verbs are
also used with other meanings as ordinary non-copular verbs. They are then used
with adverbs, not adjectives. Examples are: appear, look, taste and feel.
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