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Anonymous Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Structure Of "A Place To Let Loose"

Teenagers need a place to let loose.


Could I say a preposition 'in' is omitted in the sentence?

What I mean: Teenagers need a place to let loose in.

Teenagers need a place which to let loose in.

Teenagers need a place in which to let loose.

Teenagers need a place to let loose.

  

Top answer

anonymous Could I say a preposition 'in' is omitted in the sentence? That is probably the simplest way of trying to understand it, but I do not think that is what's happening. Some nouns can take this treatment with an infinitive, and we don't feel like there is anything missing.

  • anonymous Could I say a preposition 'in' is omitted in the sentence?
  • That is probably the simplest way of trying to understand it, but I do not think that is what's happening.
  • Some nouns can take this treatment with an infinitive, and we don't feel like there is anything missing.
  • The only ones I can think of offhand are "place" and "time".
  • Look at Ecclesiastes 3 (KJV): "A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance".
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1 Answers
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anonymousCould I say a preposition 'in' is omitted in the sentence?

That is probably the simplest way of trying to understand it, but I do not think that is what's happening. Some nouns can take this treatment with an infinitive, and we don't feel like there is anything missing. The only ones I can think of offhand are "place" and "time". Look at Ecclesiast

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