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grammar – In “Lucifer Rising”– grammatical explanation for use of -ing form

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Titles of films are often phrases rather than complete sentences.

In this case, “Lucifer Rising” is an example.

Grammatically, this is a noun phrase, composed of a noun “Lucifer,” and an -ing verb form “Rising.” Traditionally in English, there are two grammatical classifications for the -ing verb form – it’s called a “gerund” when it’s used like a noun, and a “participle” (named the “present participle” or “progressive participle”) when it modifies a noun or is used as part of a verb. In this case, “Rising” is modifying the noun “Lucifer,” so it is considered a participle.

Why “Rising” and not “Rises”? The use of the progressive participle makes the action seem dynamic and “in progress.” For actions in progress like this, a progressive verb form is preferred over a plain present tense form like “rises.”

What’s going on with the word order? Words that modify nouns often come before them in English. So it makes sense to expect the order “Rising Lucifer.” Why is the other order, “Lucifer Rising” also OK, and used so often?

In fact, it is grammatically possible for a participle to come before or after a noun. But it’s complicated to explain the choice of position in particular cases.

A participle usually comes after a noun if it has “extra stuff” attached to it. So normal expressions are “a dying man” but “a man dying of leprosy.” “A man dying” and “A dying-of-leprosy man” both sound odd, to say the least, to an English speaker.

But, in a title like “Lucifer Rising,” there is no extra stuff, just the participle. So, why does it come after?

One explanation might be that it is being treated as a so-called “postpositive adjective” (participles are not exactly adjectives, but they can behave similarly). In languages like French, the normal position for adjectives and participles is after the noun. This has influenced English. In some cases, putting the adjective after the noun has a poetic effect suitable for the title of a work of art. Wikipedia talks about this and has a list of examples in titles:

Titles of books, films, etc. commonly feature nouns with postpositive adjectives. These are often present or past participles (see above), but other types of adjectives sometimes occur.

Examples: Apocalypse Now Redux, Body Electric, Brideshead Revisited, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, A Dream Deferred, Hannibal Rising, Hercules Unchained, The Life Aquatic, A Love Supreme, The Matrix Reloaded, Monsters Unleashed, Orpheus Descending, Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, Prometheus Unbound, “The Road Not Taken”, Sonic Unleashed, Tarzan Triumphant, The World Unseen.

(bolding not in original)


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