RonPurewal Wrote:saptadeep's post (2 posts up from this one) is quite good; if you had trouble with my explanations, you may want to take a look at his.
Thanks Ron!!!
RonPurewal Wrote:saptadeep's post (2 posts up from this one) is quite good; if you had trouble with my explanations, you may want to take a look at his.
justprashant Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:saptadeep's post (2 posts up from this one) is quite good; if you had trouble with my explanations, you may want to take a look at his.
Thanks Ron!!!
RonPurewal Wrote:ashish.agarwala Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:* estelle was afraid to move because of a spider sitting on the wall --> correct, because estelle is afraid because of the spider itself, not because of the spider's sitting on the wall.
Is usage of because correct? Don't we need to use DUE TO in this case?
Estelle was afraid to move DUE TO a spider [NOUN] sitting on the wall [VERB PHRASE]
no; that use of "due to", while common in spoken language, is wrong.
see here
post29817.html#p29817
lucas.gao1103 Wrote:I find another post that contains a perhaps different use of 'due to', could the 'due to' in the non-underline part be replaced by 'caused by'?
data-gathered-by-weather-satellites-has-been-analyzed-by-t2476.html
Thanks
tushaw Wrote:Can we also eliminate "C" because the first part of the sentence is a fragment that has a subject ("law") followed by two modifiers?
tim Wrote:Correct. If either construction is used, then there must be a noun as the object of the preposition.
reotokate Wrote:1). Choice D: isn't it the noun phrase too lengthy for a "because of" construction? I thought we can add only short noun after "because of".
reotokate Wrote:2). Choice B:
another problem in Prep Verbal: post26678.html
considers "with + noun + modifier" construction correct as it modifies the whole sentence rather than the subject "the honeybee’s stinger"; so isn't it legit here as well as it modifies the entire sentence starting with "emigrants"?
Thank you!