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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

The inversion for the exclamation

More exciting comics featuring the greatest heroes of the ages from Alex Ross, Dynamite, and Project Superpowers! Join series mastermind Alex Ross for the debut of The Death Defying 'Devil with writer Joe Casey and artist Edgar Salazar! Spinning out of the events from Project Superpowers Chapter One and bridging the gap before the debut of Project Superpowers Chapter Two, the mysterious 'Devil is put on the case to track down the terrorist organization known as "The Claw." Travelling with the equally mysterious Justine, The 'Devil is also shadowed by a new hero that very well may hold the answers to the 'Devil's strange existence, and new clues to the nature of the Urn which imprisoned all of our heroes!

The underlined sentence has the very long subject, but I think that "join" is inverted is due to exclamation.
I'd like to know whether my guess is right.
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

It's just a long imperative. A simpler example is eg Join me for dinner!

  • It's just a long imperative.
  • A simpler example is eg Join me for dinner!
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3 Answers
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It's just a long imperative.
A simpler example is eg Join me for dinner!
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Thank you, Clive, for your kind answer. Emotion: smile
Then I'd like to know whether "series mastermind" is a compound noun and the sentence t
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Then I'd like to know whether "series mastermind" is a compound noun Yes
and the sentence tells us to join Alex Ross. Yes


And I'd like to know why there is an exclamation mark for imperative sentence. I'm surprised you ask. Imperatives are commonly followed by an exc

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