Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’

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Sujet : Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’
De : jerry.friedman99 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (jerryfriedman)
Groupes : sci.lang alt.usage.english
Date : 25. Jun 2024, 01:49:44
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Organisation : novaBBS
Message-ID : <76683e692af2cdb3126fba7eab2301c2@www.novabbs.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
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Antonio Marques wrote:

jerryfriedman <jerry.friedman99@gmail.com> wrote:
Aidan Kehoe wrote:
 
Ar an ceathrú lá de mí Bealtaine, scríobh jerryfriedman:
 
Aidan Kehoe wrote:
 
Ar an chéad lá de mí Bealtaine, scríobh Antonio Marques:
 
Never mind that in the bit that Steve quoted to flippantly
inquire
on what 'that' meant, it was quite explicitly said
'dither'.
 
 
The "it" there isn't idiomatic
 
The sentence sounded wrong to me, but even now I'm not sure
why. As
to 'it', maybe it's not idiomatic, but is it ungrammatical?
I
don't
quite see it.
"It" refers to "dither",
No, it's an impersonal passive, and I've just found out that
for the
last 30/40 years I may have been using a construct that
english
doesn't have.
 
English does have an impersonal passive, and and what you wrote is
grammatical, but again, not idiomatic. No one would have noticed
or
commented except that the sentence was posted to
alt.usage.english.
 I disagree wth both sentences. What's an example of an impersonal
passive in
English that anyone would say? And if Antonio tries posting
sentences
like
that on the Internet as, say, Anthony Marks, I'll bet it wouldn't be
long
till someone asked him what his native language is.
 
https://books.google.com/books?q="it+was+said"
 
Now, a lot of those results are from court reports and so don’t qualify
as
“anyone would say,” but that register of English is still English.
 I think "It was said that" isn't what Antonio meant by "impersonal
passive".  In "It was said that", the "It" refers to the thing that was
said,

I don't think it does, just like my 'it' doesn't either:

It was said (that ...)
It was said (quote)
It is often said (that ...)
It is often said a picture is worth a thousand words

In all cases, 'it' doesn't refer to anything. It's there because the
syntax
requires a subject. The thing you think it refers to is the object, not
the subject.
Sorry, I did misunderstand you.  I'm not going to argue about this
analysis.

but Antonio said his "It" did not refer to "dither".
 I don't object to calling "It was said that..." an impersonal passive,
though, and I may have misunderstood Antonio.
 
Is the British Council wrong?
 
https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/c1-grammar/advanced-passives-review#:~:text=The%20impersonal%20passive%20has%20two,from%20the%20third%20century%20BCE.
 They're right, because they rule out Antonio's sentence; they say
what follows the past participle must be either a "that" clause or
an infinitive (with "to").

No, they go to the trouble of parenthesising 'that'.
We're just disagreeing about terminology, right?  Others use "'that'
clause" (well, actually "that-clause") the way I did.
"You can omit 'that' in that-clauses which serve as a direct object
without causing any ambiguity. This omission is more common in
informal speech and writing. However, 'that' _cannot_ be removed
after verbs like 'reply' and 'shout'."
https://langeek.co/en/grammar/course/1281/that-clauses
Or for something more professional:
"Elsness (1984) considers _that_-clauses which follow verbs.  He
reports a higher proportion of zero _that_ when the subject in the
_that_-clause is realised by a personal pronoun."
https://books.google.com/books?id=vcdxAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA155
However, I'm not attached to the term.  We can call it whatever
you like.  The point is that, as the British Council says, the
impersonal "It is said" can only be followed by "to" and an
infinitive or by a... relative clause with either "that" or a zero
relative pronoun?
--
Jerry Friedman

Date Sujet#  Auteur
25 Apr 24 * To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’33Aidan Kehoe
25 Apr 24 +* Re: To waffle, 'to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither'6Steve Hayes
25 Apr 24 i`* Re: To waffle, 'to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither'5Aidan Kehoe
26 Apr 24 i `* Re: To waffle, 'to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither'4Steve Hayes
26 Apr 24 i  `* Re: To waffle, 'to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither'3Aidan Kehoe
26 Apr 24 i   `* Re: To waffle, 'to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither'2Chris Elvidge
26 Apr 24 i    `- Re: To waffle, 'to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither'1lar3ryca
25 Apr 24 +* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’4Ross Clark
25 Apr 24 i`* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’3Christian Weisgerber
26 Apr 24 i `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’2Tilde
28 Apr 24 i  `- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1Antonio Marques
25 Apr 24 +* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’19jerryfriedman
25 Apr 24 i+* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’17Bertel Lund Hansen
26 Apr 24 ii+- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1Peter Moylan
28 Apr 24 ii`* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’15Antonio Marques
29 Apr 24 ii +* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’2Bertel Lund Hansen
29 Apr 24 ii i`- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1Antonio Marques
30 Apr 24 ii `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’12jerryfriedman
30 Apr 24 ii  `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’11Antonio Marques
30 Apr 24 ii   `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’10jerryfriedman
1 May 24 ii    `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’9Antonio Marques
2 May 24 ii     +* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’7Aidan Kehoe
2 May 24 ii     i+- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1Snidely
4 May 24 ii     i`* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’5jerryfriedman
24 Jun 24 ii     i `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’4Aidan Kehoe
24 Jun 24 ii     i  `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’3jerryfriedman
24 Jun 24 ii     i   `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’2Antonio Marques
25 Jun 24 ii     i    `- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1jerryfriedman
4 May 24 ii     `- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1jerryfriedman
25 Apr 24 i`- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1lar3ryca
25 Apr 24 +- Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’1Christian Weisgerber
25 Apr 24 `* Re: To waffle, ‘to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither’2Tony Cooper
25 Apr 24  `- Re: To waffle, ?to waver, to vacillate, to equivocate, to dither?1LionelEdwards

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