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Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Makes to be

In fact, no such love existed, and indeed the structure of society makes the love Nora Helmer imagined to be real an impossibility.


Are there any grammatical mistakes?

  

Top answer

It's grammatical, but "makes to be", your subject line, is not a phrase within that sentence. The structure is "X makes Y an impossibility", where Y is the noun phrase "the love (that) Nora Helmer imagined to be real".

  • It's grammatical, but "makes to be", your subject line, is not a phrase within that sentence.
  • The structure is "X makes Y an impossibility", where Y is the noun phrase "the love (that) Nora Helmer imagined to be real".
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1 Answers
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It's grammatical, but "makes to be", your subject line, is not a phrase within that sentence. The structure is "X makes Y an impossibility", where Y is the noun phrase "the love (that) Nora Helmer imagined to be real".

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