mister.meng Wrote:Anybody kindly take a look at my new question?
don't "bump" threads like this, unless you want to wait longer for an answer to your query!
we answer the questions on this forum in a strict time order, from oldest to newest. therefore, when you "bump" questions like this, you are actually moving your question to the LAST place in the queue.
you "bumped" this thread twice in a period of about two weeks, meaning that you delayed
our response by about two weeks.
Hi Ron, so from this OA we can also conclude that in a "comma+ing", the ing action doesn't necessarily apply to the subject of the preceding clause, as shown in this case?
nope, that rule still applies. i'll show you how.
Among lower-paid workers, union members are less likely than nonunion members to be enrolled in lower-end insurance plans [that impose stricter limits on medical services and require doctors [to see more patients]], spending...[editor:
fixed. thanks.]in this case, the COMMA -ING modifier could grammatically modify either the blue clause or the purple clause (which is nested within the blue one). from context, it should be clear that the modifier is meant to modify the purple clause.
(this is normally what happens in this type of situation with nested clauses: an attached COMMA -ING modifier will normally modify the embedded, smaller clause. there is no need to memorize the statistical rule for this, however -- in most cases, such as this one, the context will make quite clear what is being modified and what is not.)
the COMMA -ING modifier modifies the action of the purple clause, and also applies to the subject of the purple clause -- namely, the relative pronoun "that". this relative pronoun, in turn, refers to "lower-end insurance plans". so the rule still works.