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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

As potentially divisive

Hi, anyone can help explain the grammar structure of 'as potentially divisive' in this example: "Controversial issues are held as potentially divisive in a given society." Thanks.

  

Top answer

" The collocated phrase is 'to hold A as B', which means 'to consider that A is B'. Does that help?

  • " The collocated phrase is 'to hold A as B', which means 'to consider that A is B'.
  • Does that help?
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2 Answers
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anonymousanyone can help explain the grammar structure of 'as potentially divisive' in this example: "Controversial issues are held as potentially divisive in a given society."

The collocated phrase is 'to hold A as B', which means 'to consider that A is B'.

Does that help?

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anonymous

Hi, anyone can help explain the grammar structure of 'as potentially divisive' in this example: "Controversial issues are held as potentially divisive in a given society." Thanks.

You might like to read this post. Your sentence is the passive equivalent of grammatical constructions shown there.

CJ

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