BBC English Masterclass: Inversion 1: After Negative or Limiting Adverbs

171,168 views ・ 2016-12-19

BBC Learning English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Under no circumstances should you stop watching this video! Only here will you get the full
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inversion explanation. Are you ready? Let's invert!
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Inversion happens in English for emphasis, dramatic purpose or formality. In order to
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invert, the normal sentence order of subject, verb and object is changed in some way. Let's
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find out how. Go!
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'Never had I met someone so interesting.'
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Now English has a group of adverbs which limit the meaning of a verb or make it negative.
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Examples are 'never', 'hardly', 'no', 'only'...and there are others. In order to change normal
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sentence order, we move the negative adverbial to the beginning of the sentence and we invert
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the auxiliary verb and subject. So:
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'I had never met someone so interesting.' becomes
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'Never had I met someone so interesting.'
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01:05
In cases where the tense does not use an auxiliary verb in the affirmative, such as the present
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simple or the past simple, one must be added. So, for example:
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'I rarely go outside.' becomes
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'Rarely do I go outside.' And
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'She seldom worked very hard.' becomes
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'Seldom did she work very hard.'
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However, there is another level to this. Some negative or limiting adverbials require you
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to complete a whole clause before the inversion takes place. It's kind of a two stage process.
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So, for example:
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'I didn't know what to do until I saw what had happened.'
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becomes 'Not until I saw what had happened did I know
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what to do.'
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In this case, 'Not until I saw what had happened' is the adverbial clause. The inversion takes
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place after this, in the main clause. And this is common with adverbs like 'Not' and
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'Only' in the following combinations:
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'Hardly' works like this too, but in the case of hardly, the inversion happens within the
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adverbial clause. It is mostly used with the past perfect to signify that one action finished
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just before another started. And notice the use of the connecting time words 'than' and
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'when' in the examples. Are you ready?
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'Hardly had I got home than the dog started barking.'
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'Hardly had he got into the bath when the phone rang.'
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Isn't it typical? Finally, we can use the expression 'little did they know' to mean
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'wait for it' they didn't know. It's extremely dramatic and it's often found within books.
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It can be quite sinister! For example:
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'Little did they know that he had stolen all of their money.'
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Did you get it? Of course you got it! Now, for more information please log on to our website
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at bbclearningenglish.com. I've been Dan, you've been fantastic and I'll see you next
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time, ok? Let's invert!
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