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Panda blue 483 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Type of usage.

How would you describe these clauses? Do they not require In reading Chris's story, In analysing, and but in returning. Or Having read Chris's telling of the story.


Analysing this poem in college as a naïve teenager, its words had obvious power. But returning to it this week, it meant something else.

Reading Chris’s telling of the story, it brought to mind my studies of Dr Suess.



Is this punctuated correctly.

The novel Devil in a Blue Dress' greatest strength is it's unconventional narrative.



  

Top answer

How would you describe these clauses? Do they not require In reading Chris's stor y, In analysing, and but in returning. Or Having read Chris's telling of the story .

  • How would you describe these clauses?
  • Do they not require In reading Chris's stor y, In analysing, and but in returning.
  • Or Having read Chris's telling of the story .
  • No, you don't need 'in'.
  • Consider this simpler example.
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1 Answers
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How would you describe these clauses? Do they not require In reading Chris's story, In analysing, and but in returning.Or Having read Chris's telling of the story. No, you don't need 'in'. Consider this simpler example. eg Feeling ill, I visited my doctor.

The following are examples of dangling participles, because they are not attached to an explicit subj

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