A-Seeing many of these people will be painful for me.
Can't this sentence mean two things:
1-If I see many of them, I will suffer.
2-There are many people here seeing each of whom will be painful for me.
I think the structure is itself capable of being used in two contexts.
B-Taking a lot of these pills will kill you.
One would assume B to mean that if you take a lot of them you will die but it could also mean:
C-A lot of these pills will kill you.
(This one seems unambiguous to me.)
A Yes, but the second strikes me as more logical and would be my default interpretation.
B It would depend on what we're looking at- if we're standing in front of a shelf of jars, then C is logical, but if we have one jar, then the first interpretation is logical.
Thanks TDOL,
But is C really unambiguous. I thought it was but I am not sure any more,
Thanks Raymott,
At first I thought C was not ambiguous. I have another question here. Would you say:
a-A lot of these pills is bad for you.
or:
b-A lot of those pills are bad for you.
if the meaning is: It will be bad for you to take a lot of these pills.
I think b could only have the other meaning (ie. there are a lot of these pills that are bad for you) but perhaps a doesn't sound right.
Is this construction informal or could it be used in formal writing?