0
Park sang joon Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

The omission of a noun after an adjective

Wi Mae Ri is the cheerful, pragmatic daughter of a failed businessman who had grown used to being constantly on the move to escape from debtors. She becomes fast friends with the free-spirited indie singer Kang Moo Kyul when she nearly ran him over in a car. Meanwhile, her father Wi Dae Han is saved from his debtors by his old friend, Jung Suk, who had just returned from considerable success in the Japanese entertainment industry. Jung Suk, who had harboured a secret love for Mae Ri’s mother, sets up a deal with Dae Han to have Mae Ri marry his son, Jung In. In her desperate to escape this predicament, Mae Ri begs Moo Kyul to pose as her husband, and finds herself in even more trouble than before when her father proposes a 100-day period in which she has to divide her time equally between Moo Kyul and Jung In, after which she has to decide who to marry.

I think though it doesn't emerge in the text, the word "need" is omitted after "desperate."
If so, I was wondering it is possible.
  

Top answer

You're right; the underlined text is ungrammatical. , In her desperation to escape ... etc.

  • You're right; the underlined text is ungrammatical.
  • , In her desperation to escape ...
  • etc.
  • or In her desperate attempt to escape ...
  • etc.
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.

1 Answers
0
You're right; the underlined text is ungrammatical. It should be, e.g.,
In her desperation to escape ... etc.
or
In her desperate attempt to escape ... etc.

Related Questions