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Ashay2018 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Structure of phrase

Hello,

Natalie Wood's drowning deemed a 'suspicious death' as more witnesses come forward. Can you please explain me a structure of phrase "Natalie Wood's drowning deemed a 'suspicious death" ?

Thanks

  

Top answer

Natalie Wood's drowning deemed a 'suspicious death ' as more witnesses come forward. This is a typical newspaper or magazine headline. It's a 'compressed' clause in passive voice - in full it would be "Natalie Wood's drowning is deemed a suspicious death".

  • Natalie Wood's drowning deemed a 'suspicious death ' as more witnesses come forward.
  • This is a typical newspaper or magazine headline.
  • It's a 'compressed' clause in passive voice - in full it would be "Natalie Wood's drowning is deemed a suspicious death".
  • "Drowning" is a noun here, and "Natalie Wood's drowning" is a noun phrase functioning as subject of the clause.
  • "Deemed a suspicious death" is the predicate, with "deemed" as verb and "a suspicious death" as direct object.
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1 Answers
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Natalie Wood's drowning deemed a 'suspicious death' as more witnesses come forward.

This is a typical newspaper or magazine headline. It's a 'compressed' clause in passive voice - in full it would be "Natalie Wood's drowning is deemed a suspicious death".

"Drowning" is a noun here, and "Natalie Wood's drowning" is a noun phrase functioning as subject of the cla

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