Re: English Grammar
- From: "Peter T. Daniels" <grammatim@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2007 14:06:01 -0800 (PST)
On Dec 14, 4:56 pm, "J. Sommers" <jsomm...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, 14 Dec 2007 10:19:20 -0800, Peter T. Daniels wrote:
On Dec 14, 12:52 pm, "J. Sommers" <jsomm...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, 14 Dec 2007 02:34:32 -0800, ad wrote:
Hello,
I have a question.
A.]
Consider this statement below:-
He played music on the Mp3 player in his car, which was newly
purchased.
Now what connotation does this above sentence give , does it mean:
1.) that the MP3 player is newly purchased Or 2.) that the car is
newly purchased
This reminds me of the TV show "Special Victims Unit." I guess
that what is special is the unit, but I can't resist thinking that they
worded it this way facetiously. How do we know anyway that the
adjective is supposed to qualify? In this case the context provides the
clue (unless, like I said, you take it tongue-in-cheek) but a variation
like, say, "Special holiday gifts" is not unambiguous.
The division that handles sex crimes in NYC is not in fact called the
SVU! (And no, it's the victims that are special, not the unit.)
Fancy that! Special, in what sense?-
Victims of sex crimes.
.
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