Anomalous finites
- Is, am, are, was, were
- Has, have, had
- Do, does, did
- Will, would; shall, should; can, could; may, might; must, ought, need, dare, used
Anomalous finites are irregular. They do not form the past tense by the addition of -ed, -d or -t, but by a change in the root vowel. Some anomalous finites (must, ought) have no past tense forms at all. But these irregular finite verbs are different from other finite verbs in many respects and hence they are called anomalous finites.
The most obvious difference between anomalous finites and other finites is that they can be used with the contraction n’t which is the shortened form of not.
- It isn’t true. (= It is not true.)
- We aren’t going anywhere. (= We are not going anywhere.)
- You shouldn’t do that.
- I don’t know what to do.
The use of anomalous finites
To form negative sentences
- I know him.
- I don’t know him. (NOT I know not him.)
- She wrote to me.
- She didn’t write to me. (NOT She wrote not to me.)
Post a Comment