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Jigneshbharati Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Use of It in " here suffice it to say"

"The written word is a marvelous thing. We could discuss the reasons why all day long, but for our purpose here suffice it to say that through the written word we can express different thoughts and emotions. "What part of speech does " it" in " here suffice it to say" belong to and what does it modify or refer to in the sentence.
  

Top answer

Jigneshbharati What part of speech does " it" in " here suffice it to say" belong to It is a pronoun. Jigneshbharati what does it modify or refer to in the sentence. It does not refer to anything else in the sentence.

  • Jigneshbharati What part of speech does " it" in " here suffice it to say" belong to It is a pronoun.
  • Jigneshbharati what does it modify or refer to in the sentence.
  • It does not refer to anything else in the sentence.
  • ) are not modifiers.
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1 Answers
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JigneshbharatiWhat part of speech does " it" in " here suffice it to say" belong to
It is a pronoun.
Jigneshbharati what does it modify or refer to in the sentence.
It does not refer to anything else in the sentence.
Subject case pronouns (he, we, I, she, you, they, etc.) are not modifiers.

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