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Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Reducing relative clause to adjective phrase

Could you explain when exactly we can reduce relative clause if there is no be verb?

I know I can say:

English has an alphabet that consists or consisting of 26 letters.

Can I do it with any verbs I want? Is it about tenses? Is it only with the present simple tense?

Thank you!
  

Top answer

Anonymous Could you explain when exactly we can reduce relative clause if there is no be verb? I know I can say: English has an alphabet that consists or consisting of 26 letters. You are mixing a gerund phrase in with a subordinate noun clause.

  • Anonymous Could you explain when exactly we can reduce relative clause if there is no be verb?
  • I know I can say: English has an alphabet that consists or consisting of 26 letters.
  • You are mixing a gerund phrase in with a subordinate noun clause.
  • English has an alphabet consisting of 26 letters.
  • English has an alphabet that consists of 26 letters.
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1 Answers
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AnonymousCould you explain when exactly we can reduce relative clause if there is no be verb?
I know I can say:

English has an alphabet that consists or consisting of 26 letters.

You are mixing a gerund phrase in with a subordinate noun clause.

English has an alphabet consisting of 26 letters.

English has an alphabet that consist

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