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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

An implied word

This insurance plan involves a bigger investment on the part of employers than () most of them may be willing to make.
<"on the part of" in The Free Dictionary http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/on+the+part+of>
I'd like to know if "what/ an investment" is implied after "than."
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

" Sorry, but there is nothing 'implied'. You need to approach the language with a more generous acceptance of its structures. This is a simple 'more + adjective + than' structure.

  • " Sorry, but there is nothing 'implied'.
  • You need to approach the language with a more generous acceptance of its structures.
  • This is a simple 'more + adjective + than' structure.
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2 Answers
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park sang joonI'd like to know if "what/ an investment" is implied after "than."
Sorry, but there is nothing 'implied'. You need to approach the language with a more generous acceptance of its structures. This is a simple 'more + adjective + than' structure.
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Yes, "what" is implied.

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