kylo Wrote:A B C r out bcoz of
please take the extra half-second required to write out "are" and "because".
thank you.
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Please explain modifier "A leading figure in the Scottish enlightenment"
this is a normal appositive modifier. if it frightens you, that's because it would sound ridiculous if you tried to say it out loud.
just memorize that you can place appositive modifiers, such as this one, in front of the subject of a sentence, and separate them with a comma.
the noun modified by the appositive MUST be the subject of the following clause, and MUST follow the comma IMMEDIATELY.)
here's another one:
[i]the winner of the last three poker tournaments, jared has issued a public challenge to all the players in the upcoming tournament.jared is the winner of the last three poker tournaments.
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the usage of what "what"
the double "what" takes me back to my college days.
this is actually not a special case of the word "what". it's a case of a phenomenon for which i don't have a name, but which i'll describe below.
when you have a construction involving a prepositional phrase as well as a direct object, you'll often see the following alternation:
* SUBJ + VERB + OBJ + PP, if the OBJ is
short
* SUBJ + VERB + PP + OBJ, if the OBJ is
long
examples:
ethan dedicated a song to his late father. --> the OBJ is "a song", which is short. it's placed before the PP "to his late father".
ethan dedicated to his late father a song that he had written in the hours following the funeral ceremony. --> the OBJ is "a song ... ceremony", which is really long, so it's placed after the PP.
same deal here: "what marx's das kapital is to socialism" is too long to place between "that are" and "to democratic capitalism", so you throw it in the back.