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Is there something wrong with this sentence?

The Dad is fishing.

In my opinion. It sounds wrong using Dad as the subject.

This is the context: A student was given the task to make a declarative sentence describing a picture where a father and his son are fishing.

He answered:

The dad is fishing.

In this context, is the "The dad is fishing" still wrong?

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  • Thank you for your quick response. LV - means linking verb.
    – Jerome Gee
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 8:13
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    OK, but you don't need the auxiliary in "it sounds wrong". And, again we do not use the definite article for members of family e.g. "The brother is playing football at the park" (NO) It's "My brother's / Jack's playing football in the park"
    – Mari-Lou A
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 8:17
  • What's wrong with "using Dad as the subject?" Can you explain?
    – Kris
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 8:21
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    @oerkelens "Dad is fishing" to me says "My Dad is fishing" adding the "The" and removing the capital means "that dad is fishing"
    – WendyG
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 10:22
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    "Dad" should not be capitalized, since it's not his name.
    – Hot Licks
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 11:30

2 Answers 2

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Yes it is fine, it just sounds odd because it is very short and isolated.

Imagine if the student had made it a longer sentence about a whole family day out, it would sound fine.

The dad is fishing, the mum is sleeping in the long grass and their kids are playing a ball game.

I agree it does sound odd as presented, and it took me a few moments to realise it was a correct sentence.

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  • 1006a added their much fuller answer whilst I was typing this, but I feel my extended sentence adds something useful.
    – WendyG
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 10:26
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As an answer to the question "What's happening in this picture?" the sentence is fine.

You've said that he picture shows a father and son fishing, so all we know about the man is that he is the father of a son and he's fishing. Without a name for either person, the speaker uses the man's relationship as a sort of occupational title, calling him "the dad". This is similar to how we might refer to "the teacher" or "the doctor". It's fine to use any of these as the subject of a sentence. Note that it would also be grammatical and somewhat logical (but less likely) to say

The fisherman is hanging out with his son.

If the speaker were discussing their own father, we would expect not to see a definite article: it should be "my dad" or just "Dad" (capitalized because here it's being used more as a name than a description). And when discussing a known person's father we'd expect a possessive pronoun or the possessive form of the person's name: "his dad" or "Jordan's dad". Those situations are a lot more common than this kind of condition where the speaker needs to comment based on such limited information, which might be why the sentence sounds odd to you.

The only other thing that stands out about "the dad" as a subject is that it's somewhat informal. In a more formal setting we would usually use "the father" in place of "the dad". This comes up in, for example, news and legal reports, as in "The father of DJ Jeffries . . . isn't pleased with Kentucky" or "the trial court clearly . . . failed to accord the father the constitutional protections he was due". But in casual conversation it's fine to use "dad". I don't know whether formal language was important in this test, but if so "the dad" might have been too casual.

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  • yes, when saying this I wanted to change dad for father, but didn't know why :)
    – WendyG
    Commented Aug 2, 2018 at 10:26

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