[영문법] Non-finite clauses and Clauses without verbs

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From this example, we also have to teach a way to distinguish ‘catenative verb’ from ‘catenative complement’. The matrix verbs in the catenative are ‘catenative verbs’: seems, want, stop, trying, avoid. Then, we’ll apply the term ‘catenative complements’, to the licensing verbs and to the construction. So all of the non-finite clauses which is complement of the head verb in the examples function as ‘catenative complement’: to want to stop trying to avoid meeting him, to stop trying to avoid meeting him, trying to avoid meeting him, to avoid meeting him, meeting him. Studying catenative construction, it is highly important for students to understand the meaning of ‘catenative’ because it is the basic discussion about catenative construction. Thus we have to repeat the explanations to the students. For extra activities, researching other examples of catenative verbs will be useful for students to understand the concept.
For the next step, we will give an explanation that most cases where a non-finite clause is an internal complement of verb in the catenative construction. We can use the above instance again because it became a familiar example in their memory. However, it is not applied to the all examples. We have to give some exceptions. One of the