Each company has information about itself...

GoldfishLord

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Tarheel

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I suppose you could use "itself" in the second one. In fact, if you insist upon it go right ahead.
 

jutfrank

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Anxiety also has an immediacy about it that pressures you to worry now and keep worrying.

I consider the highlighted coloured part an idiomatic form of expression.

She has something about her that I can't explain.
Pete had a certain joy about him that was infectious.


In this form of expression, the object pronoun is used, not the reflexive one.
 

GoldfishLord

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In the first sentence, "information about itself" is a noun phrase but in the second sentence, "an immediacy about it" is not a noun phrase.

It seems to me that "it" should be used after "about" because "an immediacy about it" is not a noun phrase.
What do you say?
 
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jutfrank

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in the second sentence, "an immediacy about it" is not a noun phrase.

Please explain how you've reached this conclusion.

It seems to me that "it" should be used after "about" because "an immediacy about it" is not a noun phrase.
What do you say?

I have almost no idea of what you're thinking or why you're thinking it.

Why are you talking about noun phrases? Read post #3 again.
 

GoldfishLord

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Please explain how you've reached this conclusion.
Is the "an immediacy about it " in "Anxiety also has an immediacy about it" a noun phrase?
I think that "about" means "in the nature of".
 

GoldfishLord

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Anxiety also has an immediacy about it that pressures you to worry now and keep worrying.

I consider the highlighted coloured part an idiomatic form of expression.

She has something about her that I can't explain.
Pete had a certain joy about him that was infectious.


In this form of expression, the object pronoun is used, not the reflexive one.
Now, I understand.
I'd like to ask another question.

Are "something about her" and "a certain joy about him" not noun phrases?
 

Tarheel

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They are definitely noun phrases.
 
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