parthian7 Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:1. can I say?
guys
on the bb team
are taller than
on the soccer team.
no.
if you have a comparison between two
different nouns (or pronouns), then both of them should appear explicitly.
since this sentence is a comparison between "guys..." and other guys, you have to have a noun/pronoun to represent the other guys.
e.g.
the guys on the basketball team are taller than those on the soccer team---
Hello Ron,
First thank you very much for all your replies to all my questions here or in other posts. They have been very helpful.
Second, I have a question here regarding the your comment (in some other post) that 'pronoun must refer to the ENTIRETY of the noun phrase serving as an antecedent'. If so, in the example above, why 'THOSE' doesn't stand for the guys on the basketball team, but just 'the guys'?
Third, if the sentence reads:
Only seven people this century have been killled by GWS, fewer than those have been killed by bee stings. -> Is it considered parallel?
[Edit: funny enough regarding my above question I encounter your post here:
the-number-of-people-flying-first-t5600-60.htmlI think that's the reason why this might not be correct but it's indeed hard to articulate the reason .
I feel it will be correct if it reads "fewer than those who have been killed...', however, this way the parallelism is destroyed so either way it's incorrect
](sorry for mumbling here, but please correct me if the thinking process is wrong)
Thanks again!