|
grammaire anglaise > formes > ellipse
(Ø), élision / contraction

The Guardian
ad
p. 40 11 October 2005

Steve Roper
and Mike Nomad Fran Matera
10.10.2004
http://www.kingfeatures.com/features/comics/sroper/about.htm
Ellipse
Un énoncé peut comprendre
plusieurs ellipses :
conjonction,
nom, pronom,
pronom relatif, auxiliaire,
verbe,
lettre(s).
ellipse de beverbe
dans la structure
beverbe
+ to > Base Verbale
(futur programmé)
1st Doses Of COVID-19 Vaccine
[
Ø = Are
] To Be Administered
This Week In The U.K.
December 6, 2020
2:40 PM ET

The Guardian
p. 28 7.7.2006
ellipse du segment -ing
dans une structure théorique (= non formulée)
en be + -ing :
Coronavirus Cases
Are Surging.
The Contact Tracing Workforce
Is Not [
Ø = surging
]
August 7, 2020 NPR
ellipse de la base verbale
(BV)
dans une structure modale
(ci-dessous une structure en could)
How could
he [
Ø = base verbale
]?

8 November 2004

The Guardian
p. 17 5.7.2006

The Guardian
p. 16 28.7.2006

NoW web
frontpage 7.8.2005
Full story >
http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/story_pages/news/news1.shtml

NoW
3.4.2005
Le pronom relatif
that,
lorsqu'il est objet,
peut être supprimé
[ ellipse ]
:
the man
[
Ø =
thatobjet ]
I love
Ninety
minutes on primetime:
high noon for Kerry
Face-to-face at last for a television debate
[
Ø =
that
]
50m Americans will watch
Headline and sub, G, 30.9.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2004/sep/30/
uselections2004.television
Par contre,
thatsujet
ne peut pas être supprimé :
or drive the car
thatsujet
will make your neighbours
wish for better specification

The Guardian p. 12
2 October 2004
The
one thing you can guarantee about BAE Systems is that
its annual meeting will
attract the usual band of protesters,
and last Friday’s
[
Ø = meeting
]
was no different.
BAE strives to carve a niche in
defence, T, Business pullout, p. 37, 6.5.2002.
[
Ø = Are
you
]
Ready
to show us your skills?
GE2,
Systems Trainer ad, p. 6, 9.9.2002.
Elision
L'apostrophe
signale l'élision / la disparition
de une ou plusieurs lettres :

Sun Sport frontpage 2
November 2003

25 November 2003

The Guardian
p. 7 15.8.2006

The Guardian
p. 19 15.7.2006

The Guardian
p. 35 9.3.2007

The Guardian
p. 31 26.3.2007


The Guardian
10.6.2004

The Guardian
p. 30 21.5.2005
http://digital.guardian.co.uk/guardian/2005/05/21/pages/brd30.shtml
Read
'em
and weep
Being asked to judge a
major fiction prize may be a huge privilege,
but there's more to it than just
reading a mountain of novels.
As the winner of this year's Orange prize is
announced,
Katharine Viner, the editor of Guardian Weekend
and one of the five
judges, reflects on weeks of hard graft,
moments of panic and at least one day
spent in tears
Headline and sub, G, 9.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2004/jun/09/
orangeprizeforfiction2004.orangeprizeforfiction
We’ll
[
Ø = will
]
prove you can take time off
for
the trip
you’ve
[
Ø = have
]
always
dreamed of.
Hit the road
ad, T2, p. 6, 7.3.2002.
'S
marque du génitif

The Guardian G2
frontpage 4.10.2004
≠
'S
forme contractée de is

24 September 2004

16 September 2004
autres énoncés
Summer's greatest rock festival
returns to the
stage
and the atmosphere's
[ is ] great, man
Headline, I, p. 7, 18.10.2002
Here's
[ is
] what's
[ is
] waiting for you
in
Ken Fisher's
Stock Market Outlook
Ad, R, 1.12.2003.
Texas Execution [
Ø =
is
]
Stayed
Based on Race Testimony
September 16, 2011
The New York Times
By MANNY FERNANDEZ
HOUSTON — In May 1997, a psychologist took the stand in a
courtroom here during the sentencing hearing of Duane E. Buck, a black man found
guilty of killing his former girlfriend and her friend.
The psychologist, Walter Quijano, had been called by the defense, and he
testified that he did not believe Mr. Buck would be dangerous in the future. But
on cross-examination, the prosecutor asked Dr. Quijano more detailed questions
about the factors used to determine whether Mr. Buck might be a danger later in
life.
“You have determined that the sex factor, that a male is more violent than a
female because that’s just the way it is, and that the race factor, black,
increases the future dangerousness for various complicated reasons,” the
prosecutor asked Dr. Quijano. “Is that correct?”
“Yes,” the psychologist replied.
That statement, and how it was handled by the Harris County District Attorney’s
Office, helped spare Mr. Buck from the death chamber on Thursday, and has become
the center of a case that has raised questions about the role of race in the
Texas criminal justice system at a time when Gov. Rick Perry’s support of the
death penalty has become a factor in his campaign for the Republican
presidential nomination.
Mr. Buck, 48, had been scheduled to be executed on Thursday evening, but the
Supreme Court intervened, granting a temporary stay of execution pending a
decision about whether it will review an appeal of his case. Mr. Buck’s lawyers
had argued that his death sentence was based, at least in part, on his race, and
that in carrying out his execution, the state would violate the Equal Protection
Clause of the Constitution, which prohibits discrimination by state governments.
At Mr. Buck’s sentencing hearing in 1997, the Harris County prosecutor told the
jury in her closing argument to rely on the psychologist’s expert testimony,
telling the jury: “You heard from Dr. Quijano, who had a lot of experience in
the Texas Department of Corrections, who told you that there was a probability
that the man would commit future acts of violence.”
In 2000, while the case was on appeal, the state attorney general at the time,
John Cornyn, made an unusual announcement, conceding error in Mr. Buck’s case
and six others in which the government had relied on race as a factor in
sentencing. Mr. Cornyn, now a United States senator, stated that if the lawyers
for the defendants in those cases challenged the government’s reliance on race
at sentencing, he would not object. All of those cases centered on testimony
from Dr. Quijano, a former chief psychologist for the state prison system.
“The people of Texas want and deserve a system that affords the same fairness to
everyone,” Mr. Cornyn said then.
Of the defendants, all of whom were on death row, Mr. Buck was the only one who
had not been granted a new sentencing hearing. The others were later
re-sentenced to death.
The efforts to stop Mr. Buck’s execution drew widespread support. Linda Geffin,
a former assistant district attorney in Harris County who helped prosecute Mr.
Buck, wrote a letter to state officials, including Mr. Perry, asking them to
halt the execution, writing that it was regrettable that “any race-based
considerations were placed before Mr. Buck’s jury.” In addition, a survivor of
Mr. Buck’s attack, Phyllis Taylor, had urged the Texas Board of Pardons and
Paroles and the governor to halt the execution.
Ms. Taylor was a friend of Mr. Buck’s former girlfriend, Debra Gardner. Mr.
Buck’s lawyers have not denied his guilt in the case: In July 1995, about a week
after they had ended their relationship, Mr. Buck barged into Ms. Gardner’s
house in Houston with a rifle and a shotgun and opened fire, killing Ms. Gardner
and one of her friends, Kenneth Butler, while injuring Ms. Taylor. Ms. Gardner’s
two children saw Mr. Buck shoot her.
Sixteen years later, Ms. Taylor met with a lawyer in Mr. Perry’s office and a
member of the state parole board in recent days, urging them to grant clemency.
The parole board, however, later recommended against clemency.
In papers filed with the Supreme Court on Thursday, lawyers for the Texas
attorney general, Greg Abbott, wrote that Mr. Buck’s constitutional rights were
not violated and that Mr. Abbott had, in 2005, determined that Mr. Buck’s case
was not similar to the other cases involving Dr. Quijano’s testimony. “Buck
called Quijano, and Buck opened the door to this issue,” the lawyers wrote. “The
prosecutor’s cross-examination on this topic merely asked Quijano to restate
what he had said on direct. But neither Quijano nor the state suggested to the
jury that they rely on race as a factor in deciding that Buck would be a future
danger.”
Mr. Perry, who has the power to grant a 30-day stay of execution, was
campaigning in Iowa on Thursday. He has rarely granted clemency in
capital-punishment cases, overseeing more than 230 executions since he took
office in December 2000. At a debate last week among the Republican presidential
candidates in California, Mr. Perry was asked if he had lost sleep over his
record of executions, and he replied, “No, sir, I’ve never struggled with that
at all.”
Officials with the state prison agency, the Department of Criminal Justice, were
informed at 7:40 p.m. Thursday that the Supreme Court had granted a stay of
execution. Mr. Buck had already eaten his last meal of fried chicken, fried
fish, salad, jalapeno peppers, apples and an iced tea. Under state law,
executions can be carried out in a six-hour window from 6 p.m. to midnight. One
of Mr. Buck’s lawyers, Kate Black, with the Texas Defender Service, called him
to tell him the news.
Jason Clark, a spokesman for the prison agency, said of Mr. Buck: “He was
praying when I walked over. He stopped praying and said, ‘Praise the Lord
Jesus.’ ”
Texas Execution Stayed
Based on Race Testimony,
NYT,
16.9.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/17/us/
experts-testimony-on-race-led-to-stay-of-execution-in-texas.html
At £7,500 for the set,
you'd
[ would
]
think
they'd
[ would
]
get
their facts right
Yet the growing number of mistakes coming to light
in the dictionary's pages threatens to make it an embarrassment, and some
leading scholars even fear the new edition of the DNB is endangering the
international reputation of the whole university city of Oxford.
This month a heated row that began on the letters pages of literary and
historical journals late last year has forced the editors of the dictionary to
publicly defend their work. Errors in the biographies of significant historical
figures such as Florence Nightingale, Jane Austen and George V are more than
just minor details, say the DNB's detractors. In the case of Nightingale,
experts argue, the factual and interpretational blunders will damage modern
understanding of a unique medical practitioner and theorist.
Headline, sub and first §§, O, 6.3.2005,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2005/mar/06/
books.highereducation
Who'd
[ would
]
be a goddess?
She cooks like an angel, looks like an angel,
but suffered halo slip
when she gained a second husband so soon after losing her
first.
Nigella Lawson talks to Sally Vincent
about love, death, the perils of
glamour,
and why teatimes were torture when she was a little girl
Headline
and sub, G, 16.10.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2004/oct/16/
foodanddrink.shopping

Spiderman
Stan Lee 28.5.2005
http://www.kingfeatures.com/features/comics/spidermn/about.htm

Mandrake
Fred Fredericks
Created by Lee Falk 17.12.2004
http://www.kingfeatures.com/features/comics/mandrake/about.htm

Mandrake
Fred Fredericks
Created by Lee Falk 3.12.2004
http://www.kingfeatures.com/features/comics/mandrake/about.htm
The day [
Ø = when
]
the
peace was lost
Web frontpage headline, IoS, 19.9.2004, full text,
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=563406
Gangsta
culture
[
Ø = is
]
a deadly virus,
says top TV presenter
One of the
best known black personalities on British TV
said yesterday
that 'gangsta'
street culture was a 'deadly virus'
that was destroying a generation of
African-Caribbean boys.
Headline and §1, O, 12.9.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/sep/12/
schools.society
The Bill
Clinton
[
Ø = whom /
that
]
I
knew
The Middle
East, Northern Ireland, Kosovo, campaigning over Aids,
easing of world debt - we
should remember Bill Clinton
for far more than a sex scandal, says Alastair
Campbell
Headline and sub, O, 27.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2004/jun/27
/foreignpolicy.usa
Delta Air Can't Survive
as
[
Ø = it
]
Is - CEO
Headline, R,
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=
FAA3JCMP3M5FICRBAEOCFFA?type=businessNews&storyID=5440092
Release
him,
charge him or break international law,
Bush
[
Ø = is
]
told
Red Cross ultimatum to US on Saddam, G, 14.6.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/jun/14/
iraq.usa2
Tell your momma, tell your pa,
Gonna move you back to Arkansas.
All right, baby what'd
[
did
]
I
say?
Whoa, all right, baby what'd
[
did
]
I say?
Ray Charles,
What'd I Say.
The day
[
Ø = when
] the
tanks arrived
at Rafah zoo
Headline, G, 22.5.2004,
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/may/22/
israel
Your number appears
on the polythene bag
[
Ø = which / that
]
your
magazine is delivered in.
NewScientist suscription ad, 29.1.2004,
http://www.qssa.co.uk/new_scientist/default.asp?promcode=1645 -
bro
Later
on Christmas day,
scientists at the giant Jodrell Bank radio telescope in
Cheshire
turned the 76m dish towards Mars
in the hope of detecting Beagle's call
sign,
a signal no stronger than a mobile phone's
[
Ø =
signal
].
Silence from Mars: hopes fade for missing Beagle, G, 27.12.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2003/dec/27/
spaceexploration.research
Tis the
season to be silly
[
Ø = you
]
Thought
Bowie and Bing were the height of kitsch?
That Noddy Holder was as crass as it
could get?
Think again. Dave Simpson picks the 12 oddest Christmas hits...
ever!
Headline and sub, G, 28.11.2003,
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2003/nov/28/3
[
Ø = Are
you
]
Buying or selling a used car?
Ad, Mirror frontpage, 1.11.2003.
[
Ø = Are
you
]
Looking for a cheap flight?
Ad, Mirror
frontpage, 1.11.2003.
I bet
he's
[
has
]
told
you
he's
[
is
] not sleeping with his wife.
Private Lives,
GE/GE2, p. 8, 02.11.2001.
"But I
[
Ø =
have
]
been arrested five times," he said,
"for singing."
Singing the Blues
as Quarter Cracks Down, NYT/Le Monde, 17/18.11.2002.

The
Phantom
George Olesen and Graham Nolan
Created by Lee Falk
1.7.2004
http://www.kingfeatures.com/features/comics/phantom/about.htm

Guardian 23.6.2004
Voir aussi > Anglonautes >
Grammaire anglaise
explicative > Niveau avancé
présupposé
questions en
be + -ing
avec ellipse de be
passif
avec
ellipse de beauxiliaire
expressions du futur
futur programmé > (be) + to -> Base Verbale
|