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NL888 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Should "Obama’s signature health-care law" be "Obama’s signatured health-care law"?

Context:

As a result, many Democrats welcomed Tuesday’s filibuster-style floor speech by conservative Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), who pledged to talk for as long as he could in an attempt to slow Democratic plans to advance a bill that would keep the government open while also funding President Obama’s signature health-care law. House Republicans voted to strip funding from Obamacare last week in exchange for keeping the government running.

More:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/democrats-see-gop-shutdown-threat-as-opening-for-2014-election-gains/2013/09/24/ab73afc4-247c-11e3-b3e9-d97fb087acd6_story.html
  

Top answer

NL888 Should "Obama’s signature health-care law" be "Obama’s signatured health-care law"? No. 'Signature' = any unique, distinguishing aspect, feature, or mark.

  • NL888 Should "Obama’s signature health-care law" be "Obama’s signatured health-care law"?
  • No.
  • 'Signature' = any unique, distinguishing aspect, feature, or mark.
  • )
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1 Answers
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NL888 Should "Obama’s signature health-care law" be "Obama’s signatured health-care law"?
No. 'Signature' = any unique, distinguishing aspect, feature, or mark.

(And the word you want to change it to would be 'signed', anyway, not 'signatured'.)

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