The Kishi V2 supports USB-C passthrough charging, but it frustratingly lacks a headphone jack, as is found in the Backbone One.
At first I thought the "as is found" meant that the Backbone one also lacks a headphone jack. But it turned out that the Backbone one did have it. So was the writer wrong or right grammatically ? since if I said " He lacks empathy ,as is found in many people" sounded really like if I meant that many people lacked empathy.
in conclusion, does the phrase always refer to the last adjectives or nouns, or does it refer to the complement?
desk fold 871 in conclusion, does the phrase always refer to the last adjectives or nouns, or does it refer to the complement? It's just bad writing. You can't use "as is found" that way.
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desk fold 871in conclusion, does the phrase always refer to the last adjectives or nouns, or does it refer to the complement?
It's just bad writing. You can't use "as is found" that way. The meaning gets muddled. The writer meant "The Kishi V2 supports USB-C passthrough charging, but it frustratingly lacks the headphone jack found in the Backbone One."