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Cpu paint 500 Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Grammar

IN the sentence: We'll stay in the city for long.

are the prepositional phrases in the city and for long?

How is long an Oby/noun of the preposition?

  

Top answer

I propose a slight change to the idea of a "prepositional phrase" that agrees with that of the many old grammar books. " The full prepositional phrase therefore comprises the antecedent + the preposition + the consequent. Most dictionaries and grammar books today only consider the preposition + the consequent as comprising the "prepositional phrase," but semantically, it should consider both terms.

  • I propose a slight change to the idea of a "prepositional phrase" that agrees with that of the many old grammar books.
  • " The full prepositional phrase therefore comprises the antecedent + the preposition + the consequent.
  • Most dictionaries and grammar books today only consider the preposition + the consequent as comprising the "prepositional phrase," but semantically, it should consider both terms.
  • " If we only consider the term after the preposition (if the consequent is a noun or pronoun, it is in the objective case and can be called the object of the preposition ), we are apt to lose site of the fact that the preposition is a connecting word, similar in some respects to a conjunction, which connects two or more terms, so both all of the terms should be considered when identifying the prepositional phrase.
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2 Answers
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I propose a slight change to the idea of a "prepositional phrase" that agrees with that of the many old grammar books. Similar to a conjunction, a preposition is a word that connects two or more ideas in a sentence or phrase, the earlier word being the "antecedent" and the later word being the "consequent." The full prepositional phrase therefore comprises the antecedent + the preposition + th

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cpu paint 500

IN the sentence: We'll stay in the city for long.

are the prepositional phrases in the city and for long?

How is long an Oby/noun of the preposition?

In my experience 'for long' is only used in non-affirmative contexts, so I'd expect We won't stay in the city for long.

However, this is beside the point where your

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