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  • Asked on September 11, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 11, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 11, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 11, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 11, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 11, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 10, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 10, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 10, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes
  • Asked on September 9, 2021 in Phrases.

    How can we determine whether expressions fit in sentences with the structure of words, by asking what happens in sentence structures. If a phrase provides information about the place, time, manner, mode, purpose, means, frequency, duration, degree, focus, certainty, viewpoint, or evaluation, then the phrase is operating adverbially to modify the verb or an adjective. Sometimes the scope of the modification is difficult to pin down and we say that the adverbial action applies to an entire clause.

    Can you see tiny insects? When you have seen big objects, they are tiny, and therefore, to see them is a must. Your eyesight or hresight, to see them, must be enhanced by the manner of magnification. No, please not.

    How much bees sting a worker in order to get rid of fungus? How

    can you hammer nails through a wall? Sure, but hammering requires a mode of permission.

    If a phrase accompanies a transitive verb, which conveys action to a direct object, and the phrase tells us what was conveyed to the direct object, then the phrase serves as an objective complement. That is to complete the meaning of transfer of action.

    How was the tut foundation related to the school by conveyance? How did the conveyance work? How was they transferred? I pay a small amount

    to a teacher who educated the girls in a subsidized scheme — he taught them (the direct object of the teaching), and what were they taught? How do you prepare a curry recipe?

    Sometimes the answer depends on your interpretation. I have heard this before. In (1) does “about the accident” modify the telling or does it complete the action of telling? If the former is an adverbial; if the latter is an objective complement.

    • 403756 views
    • 30 answers
    • 149129 votes