mcmebk Wrote:tim Wrote:no. just ask yourself what you have enough of, and it should become clear.. :)
Tim your answers always confuses me more, it seems that you most of the time detour to answer our questions directly and explain to us with reasons and examples, instead you throw questions back to us as if we should know them without asking you.
actually, what tim is doing here is exactly what tim should be doing here.
you're looking at the correct answer to an official problem. so, everything in that answer is, by definition, correct.
in the current context, it's quite clear exactly what is "enough" to do xxxxxx. so, because the sentence is correct, you can tell EXACTLY how that modifier works -- by just looking at the sentence.
if that functionality clashes with your understanding, then what's wrong is your current understanding, not the functionality.
in that case, you just have to update your understanding to encompass the current example.
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also, in terms of language, "responding with examples" is essentially the only thing that's effective.
trying to explain anything (except maybe the simplest things) in terms of "rules" is at best difficult, and at times impossible. on the other hand, if you are handed a decent set of examples, you don't need a "rule" -- you can just make analogies to the examples.
think about how you learned your first language as a kid.
how many "grammatical rules" did your parents teach you? zero, none, nada.
how did you actually learn the language? by accumulating countless examples and making appropriate analogies to them.
that's the same thing you should do here. if you actually try to think in terms of "rules" when you're solving SC problems, there's no way that's going to happen within a reasonable amount of time.