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Hans51 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Confusing sentence

"Hope to achieve economic growth, provide for its people is a fallacy it is not true, it cannot be done and will not happen."

I have seen the sentence in a news article and it is a spoken English and written down in a paper and I was wondering if 'it is not true, it cannot down and will now happen' modifies a fallacy like the fact that S V and the news that S V, etc or they does not modify a fallacy and it should be 'It is not true...', like

"Hope to achieve economic growth, provide for its people is a fallacy. It is not true, it cannot be done and will not happen."

What do you native English speakers think? Thank you so much as usual in advance.
  

Top answer

The original sentence is incorrect. It appears that a new sentence should start at "It", as you say. Other aspects are not great either.

  • The original sentence is incorrect.
  • It appears that a new sentence should start at "It", as you say.
  • Other aspects are not great either.
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1 Answers
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The original sentence is incorrect. It appears that a new sentence should start at "It", as you say. Other aspects are not great either.

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