On Jul 11, 10:11 pm, Jerry Friedman <
jerry_fried...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Jul 11, 3:54 am, Guy Barry <
guy.ba...@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
> > I think "as" in this sense is normally analysed as a subordinating
> > conjunction; e.g. "as in the 1960s" is seen as elliptical for "as it
> > was in the 1960s". However "unlike" can't be used as a conjunction
> > ("unlike it was in the 1960s"), so I'm uncertain how to classify the
> > disputed usage.
>
> Maybe this is the one situation where it can be used as a conjunction
> in standard English.
There's a subtlety here which had eluded me, though. The use of
"like" as a conjunction, though generally frowned upon, is common in
informal speech ("like it was in the 1960s"), but I'm not aware that
"unlike" is ever used in this way.
> > As I mentioned elsewhere, perhaps the closest
> > parallel is with "instead of", which can also take a prepositional
> > phrase as its argument ("he came on foot instead of by car"). Meta-
> > preposition?
>
> That was an excellent example, and there are others:
>
> The daffodil leaves are emerging from under the snow.
>
> I've looked everywhere, from behind the refrigerator to inside the
> oven.
Mark Brader suggested earlier in the thread that phrases such as
"under the snow" and "inside the oven" can in fact function as NPs in
contexts like these. I wasn't entirely convinced by his example, but
I may have to reconsider. The meaning is roughly "...emerging from [a
place] under the snow", so I suppose "under the snow" has the force of
a NP here.
> Such houses sell for between $100,000 and $150,000.
Again, the meaning is roughly "...sell for [an amount] between
$100,000 and $150,000", so again the prepositional phrase seems to
have the force of an NP.
> All of these can be understood as involving elision. ("He came on
> foot instead of coming by car.")
I think there's something different going on in the case of "instead
of", because as far as I can see it can be followed by *any*
prepositional phrase, not just one that can be analysed as an NP. I
gave some BNC examples earlier in the thread:
... to wear them over the left breast pocket instead of on the
sleeve ...
... to work as an accounting secretary with a firm of solicitors
instead of in a class-room.
I wished I had stayed there instead of at the sweetshop.
... it was just that now he would see the shop windows shining at
night instead of by day ...
... to pay that money into court instead of to your debtor.
... weekend sailings between North Queensferry and Granton, Edinburgh,
instead of from Burntisland ...
(You don't get any examples of "instead of of", but that's for fairly
obvious reasons.)
You can treat them all as examples of ellipsis, I suppose: "...instead
of wearing them on the sleeve" and so on. But I'm inclined to think
that something else is going on here; it's almost as though "instead
of" has taken on some of the properties of a subordinating
conjunction. (Substitute "rather than" for "instead of" in all the
above examples and they still work.) It almost defies traditional
grammatical classification.
--
Guy Barry