RonPurewal Wrote:qowjdfhr Wrote:what about 'they' in C. There is NO ANTECEDENT!
Please somebody help me with this...I don't get this.
"they" refers to "investment banks".
this is an acceptable construction - pronoun coming before antecedent, when the pronoun is in an initial modifier and the antecedent is in the main clause.
this is NOT acceptable if the pronoun is in the main clause and the antecedent is in a modifier that follows.
examples:
Although he had studied for hours, Thom failed the test --> acceptable
He failed the test, although Thom had studied for hours --> incorrect
Ron.....I am not sure about the second example.
Is this incorrect:- Even though Margaret worked hard, she failed ?
I would agree that "He failed the test, although Thom had studied for hours" is a clear fails "ear test" but "Although Tom had studied for hours, he failed the test" is passes "ear test".
I think that we speak similar sentences on a daily basis. I am not sure if there is any such rule. Can you please shed some light ?
Thanks
Voodoo Child