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Grammar structure: Risk nothing, you gain nothing. What is called the grammar structure of below sentence? 'Risk nothing, you gain nothing.' The meaning is clearly obvious. I need to know the term used for describing the structure of it.
Jun 12, 2017 9:26 AM
Answers · 2
1
There is an implied (elliptical) 'if you': '[If you] risk nothing you gain nothing.'
June 12, 2017
1
Hi, I think it is called an "Ellipsis" which means "to hide" and has the same etymology of Eclypse and Ellipse: since it deals with the Sun/Moon eclypses on their orbits. In fact this sentence hides "If (+ you)" which is the Conjunction (+ the Subject) introducing the part of the Conditional clause called " Protasis ". Technically it should be called an "Ellipsis of the Conjunction and of the Subject" but I don't know if there really is a technical name for each of these phenomenons.
June 12, 2017
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