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"References to the Guidelines on Technical Supervision of Ships in Service have been added." For the upper sentence, regardless of the specific meaning, is it possible that "in Service" modify guidelines? If I want the phrase "in Service" modify guidelines, how should I restructure the sentence? Are there any rules to help to understand the modifying relationship between words or phrases.
Jan 5, 2024 3:35 AM
Answers · 4
1
Yes, there is a rule. Modifiers modify the closest (by location in the sentence) relevant word in the sentence. "In Service" could modify many things: "references", "guidelines", "supervision", "ships". However "ships" is right next to "in Service" so that would be the one it modifies unless there is a strong reason to believe otherwise.
January 5, 2024
1
"In service" is defining "ships." It means ships that are currently being used. The opposite would be "ships that are no longer in service" (they're no longer used) or "ships that are not currently in service" (they're not being used right now- perhaps they're being repaired.) "In service" isn't normally used with a noun like "guidelines." It's usually used with mechanical things that wear out over time like ships, boats, planes, cars, trucks, and major appliances. One slightly different use is with taxis. If a taxi is "in service", the driver either has passengers or is looking for passengers. The opposite is "off duty."
January 5, 2024
Thank you, Janothan. I think you have given me the most clear and excellent answer. I have got it and I do thank you a lot for helping me with a much confusing question.
January 5, 2024
Hi teacher, thank you for your answer. If I don't know the meaning of“in service”, how should I know the phrase in service modify guidelines or ships?
January 5, 2024
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