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I’ll do whatever it takes to get the job.

Is whatever a direct object for do and takes?

KillingTime
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John
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    Whatever is the direct object of takes (it's a bit complicated), but it is not the object of do. The object of do is the entire noun phrase whatever it takes (a fused relative construction). – Araucaria - Him Mar 22 '23 at 09:23
  • @Araucaria-Nothereanymore. Just a few days ago, you were claiming that the antecedent of a relative clause cannot be the subject or object of the verb in the relative clause. If so, how is whatever, which includes the antecedent, the object of takes? – JK2 Mar 22 '23 at 09:32
  • @JK2 Yes, you're right ,I was being lazy. Hence my '(it's complicated)' bit, and hence only a comment. Let me redo that. – Araucaria - Him Mar 22 '23 at 09:38
  • @John I was oversimplifying in my original comment. In the fused relative construction whatever it takes to get the job, there is no overt direct object of the verb take. Instead there is a gap where the overt direct object would be in a normal clause. whatever it takes ___ to get the job. The listener understands that the missing element refers to the same thing as the wh-word, in this case whatever. [In many modern grammars, the direct object of take actually is the gap - e.g. in The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language] – Araucaria - Him Mar 22 '23 at 09:47
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    @Araucaria Please write an answer. Doing so helps everyone, including the software which will know when a question has been answered. – Andrew Leach Mar 22 '23 at 09:58
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    He hit, and shattered, the vase. Two verbs ; one direct object. – Nigel J Mar 23 '23 at 00:48

3 Answers3

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(1) I’ll do whatever it takes to get the job.

As @Araucaria-Nothereanymore. has commented, the direct object of do is not whatever but the entire noun phrase whatever it takes to get the job, because what you'll do is not just whatever or whatever it takes to get a different job but whatever it takes to get the job.

Now, although @Araucaria-Nothereanymore. argues otherwise in the comment, we can say that the direct object of takes is whatever.

H&P's The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (Page 1038) says this about I accepted the advice [which my neighbour gave me ____]:

In the first instance it is the gap that is in object function, as indicated in the diagram. However, prenuclear elements that are linked to a gap are interpreted as having the function of that gap, and we can thus say in a secondary, derivative, sense that they have that function. On this account, therefore, which is object of the relative clause, just as it is in traditional grammar.

(Boldface mine.)

JK2
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  • Comments have been moved to chat; please do not continue the discussion here. Before posting a comment below this one, please review the purposes of comments. Comments that do not request clarification or suggest improvements usually belong as an answer, on [meta], or in [chat]. Comments continuing discussion may be removed. – tchrist Mar 23 '23 at 12:12
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I’ll do whatever it takes to get the job.

Is whatever a direct object for do and takes?

No.

“Whatever it takes” is the direct object of "do" = “Whatever [action] that it takes/requires”

Thus “it takes” is relative/adjectival and modifies “Whatever”.

to get the job. = in order to get the job.

in order to get the job is an adverbial phrase modifying "takes".

If you want an example of two verbs with one object:

He took and ate the apple.

Greybeard
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Whatever it takes is an idiom, and here, it is the direct object of do:

I’ll do [whatever it takes] to get the job.

You can compare it to:

I'll do [anything] to get the job.

Tinfoil Hat
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  • A more similar example would be: I'll do anything it takes to get the job, where the object of do is not just anything or anything it takes, but anything it takes to get the job. Similarly, whatever it takes to get the job is the object in OP. – JK2 Mar 23 '23 at 04:45
  • @JK2: You can say anything that it takes, but not whatever that it takes. So not so similar. – Tinfoil Hat Mar 23 '23 at 05:26
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    They're similar enough to show that they both have to get the job as part of the object of do, whereas it's not part of the object in your own example. – JK2 Mar 23 '23 at 05:42
  • No: "to get the job" is not part of the object of "do" but a separate constituent, a purpose adjunct. This is evident from the fact that "in order to" can be inserted, and also that "take" does not take a plain catenative complement, but only a complex one, the kind with an intervening NP. – BillJ Mar 24 '23 at 08:14