RonPurewal Wrote:ajit007_cool Wrote:Please explain why E is wrong . i chose E.
is it wrong because there is no parallel structure on both sides of after
or it is worng because of use of 'with'
in general, "COMMA + prep phrase modifier" is an adverbial modifier, meaning that it modifies the entirety of the preceding clause.
in this sentence, we don't want an adverbial modifier, since it doesn't make any sense for this modifier to apply to the entire preceding clause.
rather, we want a modifier that will only modify the noun at the end of the preceding clause (i.e., "profits"). since this is the exact function of a "which" modifier, that's the modifier we want here.
Hi Ron,
This is my first time to post messages on this forum. Thanks for your help in advance!
You mentioned that E is wrong because it uses "COMMA + with phrase", which should modify the entirety of the preceding clause rather than the noun at the end of the preceding clause (i.e., "profits"). But I noticed another thread, which says "with phrase" can modify the nearest preceding noun:
post91348.html#p91348The example given was:
My friend bought a Honda CR-Z, with the manual transmission that he specifically wanted.
(Here, we're describing "Honda CR-Z")
Therefore, I was wondering whether "with phrase" can modify the nearest preceding noun. If it can, the reason we eliminate E seems not to be valid. Could you please feel free to let me know whether my understanding is wrong? Thank you!