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Supercat Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

, and?

You understand how to handle amyl nitrite and can transport it correctly.

I think this is parallelism and there are two things you (can) do.
How does it sounds by adding a comma in prior to and?:

You understand how to handle amyl nitrite, and (you) can transport it correctly.

Does this sound like After understanding how to handle amyl nitrite, you can transport it correctly?
  

Top answer

Supercat Does this sound like After understanding how to handle amyl nitrite, you can transport it correctly? No, it doesn't imply that.

  • Supercat Does this sound like After understanding how to handle amyl nitrite, you can transport it correctly?
  • No, it doesn't imply that.
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6 Answers
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SupercatDoes this sound like After understanding how to handle amyl nitrite, you can transport it correctly?
No, it doesn't imply that.
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Emotion: wink That was just my rough and random guess.
Is that still parallelism although it has a comma there?
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Without the second "you", the comma would be unnecessary. Emotion: wink
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Do you mean You understand how to handle amyl nitrite and can transport it correctly is the best then?
Is this, of course, different to:
After understanding how to handle amyl nitrite, you can transport it correctly.?
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SupercatDo you mean You understand how to handle amyl nitrite and can transport it correctly is the best then?
It depends on what you want to convey.
SupercatIs this, of course, different to:After understanding how to handle amyl nitrite, you can transport it correctly.?
Yes, basically.
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teechr It depends on what you want to convey.
Ah, if I want to use parallerism, it would be the best!

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