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Takehisa Tanaka Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Why is there this "does"?

This is an excerpt from a newspaper article:
"But there is no stipulation in the law saying how long after the incident in question has occurred [does] the agent have to continue disclosing the information."

I'm wondering why there is "does" I enclosed in brackets.
Could you tell me, please?

  

Top answer

Takehisa Tanaka why there is "does" I enclosed in brackets It's a very unusual use of subject-verb inversion, probably triggered by the negation in the first clause of the sentence, and possibly incorrectly. When was this written, do you know? It seems to me that it could be fairly old.

  • Takehisa Tanaka why there is "does" I enclosed in brackets It's a very unusual use of subject-verb inversion, probably triggered by the negation in the first clause of the sentence, and possibly incorrectly.
  • When was this written, do you know?
  • It seems to me that it could be fairly old.
  • Either that or someone wrote such a long sentence that they forgot the beginning of the sentence before they got to the indirect question how long ...
  • the agent has to ...
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1 Answers
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Takehisa Tanakawhy there is "does" I enclosed in brackets

It's a very unusual use of subject-verb inversion, probably triggered by the negation in the first clause of the sentence, and possibly incorrectly. When was this written, do you know? It seems to me that it could be fairly old. Either that or someone wrote such a long sentence that they forgot th

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