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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

(for) noun + to-infinitive

The Galactic Protection Systems Expo has ended in tragedy, leaving the Meta Legion in tatters. With Helen and Gio captured by evil forces and Sovereign gone AWOL, the remaining heroes band together to confront Hector Hunt in his magic realm -- but will it be enough to save Zari from the evil growing inside her?

I think the underlined phrase "to confront Hector Hunt in his magic realm" is the to-infinitive phrase indicating the result of the immediately preceding phrase and "the remaining heroes band together" is the subject of that.

If so, I'd dearly love to know whether I can put "for" before "the remaining heroes band together."

Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

park sang joon I think the underlined phrase "to confront Hector Hunt in his magic realm" is the to-infinitive phrase indicating the result of the immediately preceding phrase and More "purpose" than "result". park sang joon "the remaining heroes band together" is the subject of that. "the remaining heroes" is the subject of the phrasal verb "band together".

  • park sang joon I think the underlined phrase "to confront Hector Hunt in his magic realm" is the to-infinitive phrase indicating the result of the immediately preceding phrase and More "purpose" than "result".
  • park sang joon "the remaining heroes band together" is the subject of that.
  • "the remaining heroes" is the subject of the phrasal verb "band together".
  • I think you may be missing the fact that "band" is a verb here.
  • " No.
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2 Answers
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park sang joonI think the underlined phrase "to confront Hector Hunt in his magic realm" is the to-infinitive phrase indicating the result of the immediately preceding phrase and
More "purpose" than "result".
park sang joon"the remaining heroes band together" is the subject of that.
"the remaining heroes" is the
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Thank you, GPY, for your answer. Emotion: smile

I think you may be missing the fact that "band" is a verb here.
Y

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