Sentences & Verbs (2)


This summer I went some kind of diving in Bali with my family.  When we were done, I talked to a diving coach, in English.  We chatted and chatted.  Yet, all of a sudden, something popped into my mind.  What is that something?  In our conversation, I found something, something that is unique to most Asian languages.  What is it?  There is a missing baby.



A. What is a Missing Baby (Verb)?



Read our conversation and you will know what I am talking about.



Me
You live here, right?  So what do you think about Bali?
Coach
Bali good.  People nice.

Me
Yes, coaches here are good and nice too.  


So you may ask: What is the problem with saying Bali good instead of 'Bali is good'.  There will not be any problem if you don't want to speed up your learning of English.



B. Three Types of Verbs  


If you want to enhance your proficiency in English, both written and spoken, (there is) one thing you can't afford to miss:


Types of Verbs












If you think I am going to give you some grammatical terms that are boring and dry, well think again. There are funny names for the three types of verbs in English, namely:







Type 1
Baby Verbs











e.g. is/am/are/was/were/been
Type 2
 
 Non-Baby Verbs








e.g. run a business, develop a program, discuss an issue
Type 3
    
Helping Verbs

Can you name the three types of verbs?     







For this post the focus is on the first type of verbs: Baby Verbs.  Why do I call them Baby Verbs? Well, they do 'almost nothing'.  What do I mean by 'almost nothing'?  They (Baby Verbs) are just something sticky, so sticky that they link the left with the right, as shown below.




Left
+
Right

These entrepreneurs             < -------   are   ------->     (digitally) smart.



Well (being) sticky is nothing special, why do you have to care about them?






C. The Mermaid Structure


It is because there is another thing about sentence structures of English.  What is it?  It has something to do with diving too.  Before you get the answer, check out the following mermaid.







What do you see?  Now look at it again from another angle (perspective):








Do you see that?  What?  The mermaid is 'divided' into three parts.  So what is my point?  You can break a sentence in English into three parts?  Which three: Head, Body, and Tail.   So do you think you can give the following sentence a go?  Break it into three.


Creating a new business model is not so easy. 




When you break it into three parts, you will find that 'creating' is not a verb.  Instead, 'is' the sticky thing, the Baby Verb, is the verb of the sentence.



HEAD
BODY
TAIL
Creating a new business model
is
not so easy.


The problem of Missing Babies becomes more serious if you try to make a long sentence (at a meeting):


Head
Body 
    |Tail
What I am going to present today
Missing Baby Verb
(is)
a plan to change the world














So for the sake of easy memory, we will give the structure a name: Hot Mermaid (Head, Body, & Tail).

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