I have just learned the usage of absolute course in this forum, here comes two immediate questions
1)"There are heartbreaking stories of residents in Tung Chung, which has no government-operated wet market, being forced to pay 6.6 per cent more for groceries compared with citywide averages prices."
Its it better adding a subject "the residents" to the initial position of the absolute clause (in bold) , otherwise the sentence would be in bad style?
2) "Worrying about the upcoming social instability, the administration is working on every measure to put the citizens in ease"
Can I not use absolute clause here by replacing "Worrying" with "Worry" , to make the clause only takes "verb + adverbial" ?
Dear Raymott,
What I mean is to rewrite the sentence as "Worries about the upcoming social instability, the administration is working on every measure to put the citizen at ease"
Is it wrong for the rewrite?
As for the most natural way you suggested "The administration, worried about the upcoming social instability, is working on every measure to put the citizens"
Why it is better to use "Worried" rather than "Worrying" , To my knowledge, the administration is the agent (doer) of "worry" , which is also a progressive action. Could you please pinpoint my faults?
[QUOTE=KSSEEJ;806965]
1)"There are heartbreaking stories of residents in Tung Chung, which has no government-operated wet market, being forced to pay 6.6 per cent more for groceries compared with citywide averages prices."
*** NOT A TEACHER ***
(1) I do not understand why you call the words in bold an "absolute clause."
(2) If you delete the words "which has no government-operated wet market,"
you get:
There are heartbreaking stories of residents (in Tung Chung) being forced to pay
6.6 percent more for groceries compared with citywide average prices.
(a) "being forced to ... citywide average prices" seems to be just a participial
phrase modifying "residents."
(3) Please remember that an absolute clause/phrase is defined as a noun + participle:
The teacher being ill, the students went home.
Hope lost, the men committed suicide.
I have just learned the usage of absolute course in this forum, here comes two immediate questions
1)"There are heartbreaking stories of residents in Tung Chung, which has no government-operated wet market, being forced to pay 6.6 per cent more for groceries compared with citywide averages prices."
Its it better adding a subject "the residents" to the initial position of the absolute clause (in bold) , otherwise the sentence would be in bad style?
Personally, I see no reason to rewrite this sentence, except to delete the final 's' of 'averages' (presumably, a simple typo): otherwise, it's perfectly grammatical and meaningful as it stands.
You could, however, make the intervening relative clause (which has...market) less obtrusive by placing it in parentheses.
could it also work this way? check it out too!
1)"There are heartbreaking stories from Tung Chung, which has no government-operated wet market, residents are forced to pay 6.6 per cent more for groceries compared with citywide averages prices.
2)"The administration, worried about the upcoming social instability, is working on every measure to put the citizens at ease" or
"The administration is worried about the upcoming social instability, thus, working on every measure to put the citizens at ease"