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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Sentence structure

You don't think I am lawyer enough, you mean? ?W. Faulkner, Sanctuary

He'll be communist next. ?A. Bennett, Accident


1)Substantives often have zero in the position as predicatives, objects, and and regimens of prepositions, e.g. in many set phrases. From the point of view of our theory of familiarity we may state the reason to be that in these cases the question of familiarity (which involves use of the denfinite article) is of no interest, the sb being used in a general sense without reference to a particular known individual or quantity.


I don't get the underlined part structurally, the other parts being understood by me.

  

Top answer

we may state the reason to be that in these cases the question of familiarity is of no interest It is a kind of indirect or reported speech. In direct speech, we may state this: "The reason is that in these cases the question of familiarity is of no interest"

  • we may state the reason to be that in these cases the question of familiarity is of no interest It is a kind of indirect or reported speech.
  • In direct speech, we may state this: "The reason is that in these cases the question of familiarity is of no interest"
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1 Answers
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we may state the reason to be that in these cases the question of familiarity is of no interest

It is a kind of indirect or reported speech. In direct speech, we may state this:

"The reason is that in these cases the question of familiarity is of no interest"

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