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'for some jerk to...' doesn't look like a noun phrase. No, but from for to the end of the sentence is, in fact, a noun phrase. It's a for ... to ... clause, and all such clauses are noun-like. It's important for him to be here
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Hi,
For her to have survived this ordeal is amazing."
In this sentence , is " For her to have survived " used as a noun phrase ? Yes
What is the meaning of the sentence ?
Does it mean that the event of her
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Here is my take:
Recognizing the immediate danger, he ordered everyone to evacuate the building. - participle phrase usge.
Recognize is a transitive verb, but I've used it without an object and as a gerund. Is that acceptable? Or,
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It is the object of the verb. Verb objects are nouns, noun phrases or noun clauses. Ergo, it is a gerund (an '-ing' verb form acting as a noun.) (This conversation started HERE .)
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1. The question has been answered a few times already , but has not been answered.
Okay to omit the subject in the sentences like the above (omitting the subject in the second clause), right? A comma before but is necessary even when the
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Peg: Noun: Economics . The level at which some price, exchange rate, etc., is set. Actually, how can we know whether it works as a noun or a verb ? Because it has an article for a start. The territory’s currency peg " Territory's
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Jaleel.nt, in the first instance, we deal with a phenomenon that is conventionally known as a passive gerund ; the whole clause with being... can be substituted with a noun phrase, eg, ...this award . Therefore, we refer to being... as a nominal
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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gleb_chebrikoff
43 days ago
Prepositions, Constructions, Clauses, Nouns, Word Order, Noun Phrases, Gerunds, Commas, Punctuation, Nominative, Marriage, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Phrases
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Dear speakers of English. I have a question concerning English relative clause which had long been my headache. Here is my sentence: He is the son of Mike, who is my best friend. My question is: which one should be the antecedent of the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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xczzhh
45 days ago
Clauses, Nouns, Noun Phrases, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Friends, Languages
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Hi! According to my book you use "there" before nouns or noun phrases and "it" before adjectives and noun clauses. What I don't understand is that right after this explanation they stated the following example:
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Compound sentence consisting of two independent clauses.
He bought a box of paints main clause
and
( he) copied a magazine lithograph of a Japanese painting of Fujiyama. main clause
Would you like to try first to do more
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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alexs
58 days ago
Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Noun Phrases, Arts, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Asia, Full Syntactic Analysis
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