0
Jigneshbharati Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Something

Today's topic is something I am very guilty of doing myself, and I’m so excited to give you the rundown: It’s overusing the words so and very.
What is the grammatical function of "something" here and what does it refere to or represent in the sentence? I understand the overall meaning just the specific use of "something I want to know.
  

Top answer

Today's topic is something ( that ) I am very guilty of doing myself "something" more or less means "a thing". The speaker is guilty of doing that thing.

  • Today's topic is something ( that ) I am very guilty of doing myself "something" more or less means "a thing".
  • The speaker is guilty of doing that thing.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

4 Answers
0
Today's topic is something (that) I am very guilty of doing myself

"something" more or less means "a thing". The speaker is guilty of doing that thing.
0
is it an indefinite pronoun?
0
It's a pronoun, anyway.
0
JigneshbharatiWhat is the grammatical function of "something" here
It is a subject complement.

Related Questions