Dick,

Here we go with terminology again.

This idea of complement was developed to describe those elements that belong to
a phrase, without which its structural integrity would be compromised.  You call
the object (a complement to transitive verbs) a "sentential" complement.  Direct
object works well for me.  That it has the form of a noun clause is an important
consideration, but you have already used the term "nominal" for a different
structure.  Maybe "object" complement.  But you probably have already used that
term for something else.  I guess we're left with "noun clause as direct
object."   This implies that we also have "noun clause as adjective complement"
and "noun clause as appositive."

Whether the restrictive appositive is a noun phrase or a noun clause, it still
seems to be identifying which instance is being referred to by the noun.  "My
sister Edna" tells us which sister you are talking about.  "The rumor that Elvis
is alive" is telling us which rumor you mean. If we want to make them
non-restrictive, we must add information to something fully identified as you do
in "my sister, a gifted artist."  With a noun clause appositive we might get
"the special theory of relativity, that the speed of light is absolute."  This
does seem awkward to some and we tend to want to make it a relative clause: "the
special theory of relativity, that states that the speed of light is absolute."
The only clause used for non-restrictive modification is an adjective clause.
It can even modify noun clauses: "That the speed of light is absolute, which is
hard to imagine because we think of light as a particle, was discovered by
Einstein, who not long before proved that light must be a particle."

Bruce

>>> [log in to unmask] 3/9/2005 12:21:45 PM >>>

Appositives function like relative clauses in that they modify noun phrases and
can be either restrictive or nonrestrictive. (Restrictive relative clause) The
thief that stole my computer should rot in hell. (Restrictive appositive) My
sister Edna married a kleptomaniac.  (Nonrestrictive relative clause)  Zebras,
which are striped quadrupeds, are native to Africa. (Nonrestrictive appositive)
My sister, a gifted artist, won a MacArthur fellowship.  Entirely different from
relative clauses are complement clauses, which have three varieties:
("Sentential" complements, which function as noun phrases)
He knows that chocolate is addictive.
That Milton raised a ruckus surprised nobody. ("Adjectival" complements, which
modify adjectives)
Martha is happy that she is no longer incarcerated. ("Nominal" complements,
which modify nouns)
The rumor that Elvis is alive spread wildly.  The clause in the cited example,
"The fact that they didn't like chocolate surprised her," is a nominal
complement.  To illustrate the difference between relative and complement
clauses, consider the following ambiguous sentence. With different
interpretations, it can be read either as a relative or a nominal complement
clause: We believed the theory that Camilla proposed to Charles.  In the
relative interpretation, Camilla proposed a certain unspecified theory to
Charles, and we believe that theory.In the complement interpretation, we believe
the theory that it was Camilla who proposed marriage to Charles and non
vice-versa. Dick Veit________________________ Richard VeitDepartment of English,
UNCWWilmington, NC 28403-5947910-962-3324
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