RonPurewal Wrote:"Are" is also necessary in that sentence because of "simply".
"Simply" is an adverb that describes the fact that these things are random byproducts; i.e., it describes the verb "are". If you remove "are", then "simply" is an orphan with nothing to describe.
Hi Ron, thank you for the fine explanation! But if "are" here is necessary because "are" is the word that "simply" wants to describe, then how about another sentence from GMATPrep:
"Introduced by Italian merchants resident in London during the sixteenth century, life insurance in England remained until the end of the seventeenth century a specialized contract between individual underwriters and their clients,
typically ship owners, overseas merchants, or professional moneylenders."
I understand "typically" here does not modify NOUN, it is supposed to modify something like "being" which is omitted. Then Why here "being" can be omitted, but "are" in the sentence of the question is necessary?