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 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

 Topic 6 (session A) - Style and Style variation > Authorial and text style > Task G

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Session Overview
Style Variation in USA
Language Variation: Dialect
Language Variation: Register
Style Variation in a poem
Reregistration
Style: What is it?
Authorial and text style
Topic 6 'tool' summary
 
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Readings
The Passages

Task G - Grammar
Our analysis of Steinbeck

His eyes were very dark brown and there was a hint of brown pigment in his eyeballs.(1) His cheek-bones were high and wide, and strong deep lines cut down his cheeks, in curves beside his mouth.(2) His lower lip was long, and since his teeth protruded, the lips stretched to cover them, for this man kept his lips closed.(3) His hands were hard, with broad fingers and nails as thick and ridged as little clam shells.(4) The space between thumb and forefinger and the hams of his hands were shiny with callus.(5)

(John Steinbeck , The Grapes of Wrath, Ch. 1)

 

(i) Click on each sentence in turn to see our grammatical analysis.

(ii) Compare your conclusions with ours

Our Conclusions:

Besides being pretty short, as we saw in task B, Steinbeck's sentences are pretty simple. The last two sentences have only one main clause, and so, in grammatical terms, are examples of what are called 'simple sentences'. Sentences 1 and 2 are compound, or linked sentences, consisting of two main clauses joined together by the conjunction 'and'. This MCl & MCl structure, which is one of Steinbeck's favourite sentence structures, is pretty simple in style terms (though not quite as simple as sentences 4 and 5). Of course you could compound more than two clauses together, but Steinbeck typically restricts himself to two main clauses conjoined by 'and'. The only complexity in clause structure terms in the passage comes in sentence 3, which has three brief adverbial clauses embedded (or nested) inside the second main clause. Although this sentence is more complex than the others, it is still pretty low down the complexity scale compared with many other writers. So the grammatical analysis confirms the overall feeling of simplicity we noted in task A. The majority of predicators are 'be' verbs ('were', 'was'), helping to give the passage its descriptive quality. There are no verbs of speech or thought and little in the way of dynamic verbs either. The phrases are also pretty simple structurally, confirming once again the overall feeling of simplicity of the description.

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