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Emory
[ Grammar ] Noun of Noun
How to interpret the following sentence ?
This unexpected squashing together of lives is like a functional MRI of our relationships with one another, and with ourselves.
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unexpected : past participle
squashing : gerund
together : adverb
Q1: There is no nouns before “of lives”, then how can we form “Noun of Noun” structure ?
Q2: Is it reasonable to use the structure “Gerund of Noun” ?
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Thanks a lot : )
14 jun. 2020 19:45
Antwoorden · 5
2
I would call “unexpected” an adjective here — it refers to the “squashing together” (a gerund of the phrasal verb “to squash together”, meaning to form into one unit by squashing). The gerund is a noun, so this is indeed a “noun of noun” structure. “Of lives” has the same meaning as the object of the gerund — we could rephrase it as “squashing lives together”. The new version is ambiguous; we can use it as either a gerund phrase or a participle phrase, depending on the context.
14 juni 2020
Dear Stephanie,
This sentence came from TIME.
I felt strange at first sight as well. : )
Ref:
https://tinyurl.com/ycmnc6ot
Thanks for your reply. ^_^
15 juni 2020
That is very strange sentence. To try to explain I will say that there seems to be a noun before "Of lives" The noun would be the implied action of grouping things. I have heard of gerunds and know that they are -ing words.
S.
14 juni 2020
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Emory
Taalvaardigheden
Chinees (Mandarijn), Chinees (Taiwanees), Engels
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels
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