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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

say nothing of

"To them, jumping from that river terrace on the outskirts of the city straight to the top of a building in the city center is as easy as opening a door. Therefore, just restraining them, to say nothing of bring them into custody, is impossible."

I suppose that "to say nothing of" should be modified into "to say anything of". Am I clear?
  

Top answer

"to say nothing of" is correct, but it should be "to say nothing of bringing them into custody". "to say nothing of" is a set phrase used to introduce an additional point that goes beyond what has already been said, often with the nuance that it is more extreme in some relevant respect.

  • "to say nothing of" is correct, but it should be "to say nothing of bringing them into custody".
  • "to say nothing of" is a set phrase used to introduce an additional point that goes beyond what has already been said, often with the nuance that it is more extreme in some relevant respect.
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1 Answers
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"to say nothing of" is correct, but it should be "to say nothing of bringing them into custody".

"to say nothing of" is a set phrase used to introduce an additional point that goes beyond what has already been said, often with the nuance that it is more extreme in some relevant respect.

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