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How to distinguish "concurrent sentence" from "sentence with subject-predicate phrase as object"

1. Sentences with complex sentences and subject-predicate phrases as objects First of all, the first verb of the sentence is different:

Most of the first verbs in complex sentences have imperative meanings, such as "make, make, send, please, request", while the first verbs in sentences with subject-predicate phrases as objects have no imperative meanings, such as "believe, hope, know and agree".

2. The phonetic pause positions of the concurrent sentence and the subject-predicate phrase are different:

You can't pause after the first verb of a part-time sentence, but the sentence with the subject-predicate phrase as the object can pause after the first verb.

3. The insertion adverbial position of the concurrent sentence and the subject-predicate phrase is different:

Part-time sentences can only insert adverbials after nouns after verbs, such as the sentence "They sent Lao Wang to this position", and can only insert adverbials after the old queen.

Exodus: They sent Lao Wang to this post in the future, so "they sent Lao Wang to this post" is a double sentence.

In sentences with subject-predicate phrases as objects, adverbials can be inserted after the first verb, such as "they agree with Lao Wang to take this position", and adverbials can be inserted after "agree".

Example: They agree that Lao Wang will take up this post in the future, so "they agree that Lao Wang will take up this post" is a sentence with a subject-predicate phrase as the object.

Extended data:

1. The predicate of the concurrent sentence consists of a verb-object phrase nested with a subject-predicate phrase, and the object of the verb-object phrase also acts as the subject of the subject-predicate phrase. The predicate (the second verb) of a part-time sentence is the purpose or result of the previous action, that is, the two verbs before and after the part-time sentence are semantically related, and the part-time sentence is a part of a sentence with two different sentence components at the same time.

2. Subject-predicate phrase is one of the structural classifications of phrases, which consists of two parts. The function of the former component is to put forward the theme, which is called the subject; The latter part states the theme and is called predicate. Subject and predicate form a subject-predicate relationship (or subject-predicate relationship, that is, "theme-rheme" relationship).

Subject-predicate phrases can play a wide range of roles. In the example used above, some subjects, predicates and attributes themselves are served by subject-predicate phrases. In addition, objects, complements, adverbials and headwords can also be subject-predicate phrases. Subject-predicate phrases are also the main structures of clauses in many simple sentences and complex sentences.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Concurrent Statement

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-subject-predicate phrase