This Blog

This blog addresses problems in grammar, research, and style that I have frequently encountered in my students' and my own writing. I aim to explain these problems and provide resources for others who may encounter similar difficulties.

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

should have + past participle



We use should have + the past participle (eaten, taken, gone, been, seen, walked, etc.) to express regret over a past action or to illustrate that an action that occurred was the wrong one. 

“The football game was great.  Manchester City dominated for whole game, but they lost.  They should have won,” said Tom.
“I didn’t see the game,” replied Paul. “I had tickets, but I gave them away.  I should have gone.”
“Yes, you should have.  I lost my voice from singing with the crowd: I shouldn’t have sung so loudly, but I couldn’t help myself.”

A usage that I have been hearing and seeing more and more frequently is “should have + simple past”—which is incorrect:

I should have went to the game. (incorrect)
I should have gone to the game. (correct)

You should have saw that movie. (incorrect)
You should have seen that movie. (correct)

He should not have ate that final piece of pizza. (incorrect)
He should not have eaten that final piece of pizza. (correct)

Remember that “should (not) have” must always be followed by a past participle.  Here is a list of some commonly confused past participles:

verb
past simple
past participle
arise
arose
arisen
awake
awoke
awoken
be
was/were
been
become
became
become
begin
began
begun
blow
blew
blown
break
broke
broken
choose
chose
chosen
do
did
done
drink
drank
drunk
eat
ate
eaten
fall
fell
fallen
forbid
forbade
forbidden
forget
forgot
forgotten
forgive
forgave
forgiven
give
gave
given
go
went
gone
grow
grew
grown
hide
hid
hidden
know
knew
known
run
ran
run
see
saw
seen
show
showed
shown
sing
sang
sung
steal
stole
stolen
swear
swore
sworn
tear
tore
torn
write
wrote
written


Resources

The Grammar in Use series by Cambridge University Press has numerous exercises for most grammatical problems (Unit 32 in Grammar in Use by Raymond Murphy and Roann Altman addresses the modal “should” in its various forms); the series runs from Basic to Advanced, so it can help with most problems.

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Commas with Restrictive and Non-restrictive Clauses



“Who” is a relative pronoun that refers to people: “who” replaces a person’s name (e.g. Peter, Paul, Mary), a person as represented by a common noun (e.g. my doctor, our friend, an astronaut), or people as represented by a pronoun (e.g. he, she, they).  “Who” can begin both restrictive and non-restrictive clauses—groups of words that provide more information about the person whom “who” has replaced. 

Restrictive clauses provide essential information, information that is essential to the sentence and could not be removed without drastically changing the sense of the sentence.  Non-restrictive clauses provide additional information, information that could be removed and the sentence would not lose much sense.  Restrictive clauses do not need commas; non-restrictive clauses do.  The following examples show the difference.

Restrictive clause: The person who used to be the principal at my high school is now the principal at my son’s school.

If we removed “who used to be the principal at my high school” from the sentence, our readers might not understand it. For instance, “The person is now the principal at my son’s school” would leave readers wondering about the identity of “the person.” “Who used to be the principal at my high school” is therefore essential because it specifies the person for the readers.  Because the clause with “who” is essential to the sentence, we do not put commas around it.

Non-restrictive clause: Joe Peterson, who used to be the principal at my high school, is now the principal at my son’s school.

If we removed “who used to be the principal at my high school” from the sentence, our readers would still understand it:  “Joe Peterson is now the principal at my son’s school” still makes sense. “Who used to be the principal at my high school” only tells us a bit more about Joe Paterson.  Because the clause with “who” is non-essential to the sentence, we put commas around it.  (Think about non-restrictive clauses as parenthetical asides.)

Though the next two examples may appear to be identical, the commas make a significant difference when we think about them relative to the previous examples:

My wife who is 34 years old works in the Marine Biology Department.
My wife, who is 34 years old, works in the Marine Biology Department.

If “who is 34 years old” is essential to the sentence (as in the first example), I would appear to be a polygamist: in many cultures, I can only legally have one wife.  The sense of the sentence is that I have at least two wives; one of them is 34 years old.  It is more likely that “who is 34 years old” is only additional information about my one wife, and the clause should therefore be placed in commas (as in the second example).

References

Hacker, Diana.  A Writer’s Reference.  5th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s: 2003.

Honegger, Mark.  English Grammar for Writing.  Boston: Houghton Mifflin: 2005.

Sabin, William A. and Sheila A. O`Neill.  The Gregg Reference Manual: Third Canadian Edition. Toronto: Magraw-Hill Ryerson, 1986.