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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

I saw [that she was going to the church.]

1. I saw that she was going to the church.

I know when "see" means "know," "see" can takes an object and a infinitival objective complement.
So I was wondering if when "see" means "look at," see can takes a "that" clause as an object.
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

For the "look at" meaning to be unambiguous, native speakers would say: I saw her going to the church.

  • For the "look at" meaning to be unambiguous, native speakers would say: I saw her going to the church.
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2 Answers
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For the "look at" meaning to be unambiguous, native speakers would say:
I saw her going to the church.
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Thank you, AlpheccaStars, for your kind answer. Emotion: smile
I'd like to know if you meant "Although the 'look at' meaning' is unambiguous"

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