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English Learner 2593 Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Not limited to

Hi everybody,

Here, [limited to] is adjective or adverb? I meant [limited to ] is as [they are limited to]?

Also, is this sentence punctuated correctly?

The mineral iron has several health benefits, including, but not limited to, better metabolism of proteins, it increases production of hemoglobin, and it protects against anemia.

  

Top answer

"limited" is adjectival; "to" is a preposition. English Learner 2593 Also, is this sentence punctuated correctly? No, it is a run-on sentence.

  • "limited" is adjectival; "to" is a preposition.
  • English Learner 2593 Also, is this sentence punctuated correctly?
  • No, it is a run-on sentence.
  • This is one possible way to fix it: The mineral iron has several health benefits, including, but not limited to, better metabolism of proteins; for example, it increases production of hemoglobin, and it protects against anemia.
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1 Answers
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"limited" is adjectival; "to" is a preposition.

English Learner 2593Also, is this sentence punctuated correctly?

No, it is a run-on sentence. This is one possible way to fix it:

The mineral iron has several health benefits, including, but not limited to, better metabolism of proteins; for example, it increases production of hemoglobin, and it

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