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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

I'm calling a meeting [with your parents].

I'm calling a meeting with your parents.
I'd like to know here if "with your parents" modifies "a meeting."
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

Dear Park It's a noun phrase - a "meeting with your parents". "with" does not attach to "am calling". Kind regards, Michael

  • Dear Park It's a noun phrase - a "meeting with your parents".
  • "with" does not attach to "am calling".
  • Kind regards, Michael
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7 Answers
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Dear Park

It's a noun phrase - a "meeting with your parents". "with" does not attach to "am calling".

Kind regards, Michael
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park sang joonI'd like to know here if "with your parents" modifies "a meeting."
Yes, you can analyze the prepositional phrase that way.
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Are you Park or Joon (or Sang)?
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My first name is park.
And we don't have middle name.
We call usually acquaintances the last name, so you can call me sang joon or SJ.
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Hi Park Sang Joon.
Please allow me to interject.

In English-speaking countries:

first name = given name = a person's individual name, e.g. Mary or Sean

last name = surname = family name, e.g. McDonald or Stephenson

So I think in your case,
Park is your surname/family name/last name.
Sang Joon is your first name/given name.

I be
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I totally agree with teechr.Emotion: smile
I'm so sorry; I was confused.
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park sang joonI totally agree with teechr.
I'm glad that's been clarified. Emotion: wink
par

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