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Seagull Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Be issued one upon entry

Hello everyone. I have a question.

Regarding the following sentence:

The ranking determines how many countries the holder can enter either without a visa or be issued one upon entry.

In it, I don't quite understand how the part "be issued one upon entry" works. I know that the construction "either A or B" is used, and I don't see any problems with the nexus "how many countries the holder can enter without a visa." But I wonder if we can say "how many countries the holder can enter be issued one upon entry." If the answer is yes, why? Is "be issued one upon entry" an adverbial phrase?

  

Top answer

The ranking determines how many countries the holder can [enter either without a visa] or [be issued one upon entry]. It doesn't seem correct to me. g: The ranking determines how many countries the holder can enter either [without a visa] or [with a one being issued upon entry].

  • The ranking determines how many countries the holder can [enter either without a visa] or [be issued one upon entry].
  • It doesn't seem correct to me.
  • g: The ranking determines how many countries the holder can enter either [without a visa] or [with a one being issued upon entry].
  • Or: The ranking determines how many countries the holder can either [enter without a visa] or [be issued one upon entry].
  • Or: The ranking determines how many countries the holder can enter [without a visa] or [with a one being issued upon entry].
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1 Answers
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The ranking determines how many countries the holder can [enter either without a visa] or [be issued one upon entry].


It doesn't seem correct to me.

It should read as, e.g:

The ranking determines how many countries the holder can enter either [without a visa] or [with a one be

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