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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
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- From: idoy@crux1.cit.cornell.edu (Mike Wilson)
- Subject: Re: Dangling Participle;is this grammer?
- Message-ID: <idoy.726405757@crux1.cit.cornell.edu>
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- Organization: Cornell Information Technologies
- References: <1icn04INN6f7@morrow.stanford.edu>
- Date: 7 Jan 93 11:22:37 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- CT.MMJ@forsythe.stanford.edu (Michelle Jahanpour) writes:
-
- >Can anyone out there tell me what a "dangling participle" is? It
- >sounds really lewd to me!
-
- Yeah, when someone told me I had a dangling participle, I looked
- down there too.
-
- Dangling participles are usually misplaced modifiers; they need
- to be near the thing they modify. Modifiers with -ing and -ed
- need to be pretty close their noun.
- Walking down the street, the moon was beautiful.
- "Walking down the street" modifies the actor, who is nowhere to be
- found in the sentence.
- Walking down the street, I noticed that the moon was
- beautiful.
- You can master the dangling participle by thinking up a few examples
- on your own.
-
- Incidentally, I found a cheap yet wonderful book that outlines the
- basics of sound writing. It's called "A New Guide to Better Writing,"
- by Rudolf Flesch and A.H. Lass, New York: Warner Books, 1977. It
- only costs 3.95. (I found it at the Paper Cutter.) The book contains
- lots of information that other good books like _Elements of Style_
- and _Ten Lessons in Clarity and Grace_ don't include.
-
- Mike
-
-
- ==========================
- Michael Wilson
- idoy@crux1.cit.cornell.edu
- ==========================
-