[Grammar] what a passage if generally about

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EUNJJUNG

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I'm reading "Style" by Joseph Williams. I have one question. It's about a sentence from the book.

"Readers understand what a passage if generally about when they see consistent ideas toward the beginnings of sentences, especially in their subjects."

Why isn't there a verb in the underlined a clause?

 
If you've copied it exactly, there's a typo. Can you find it?
 
I copied it exactly, then is there a typo in the book?
 
Yes. One letter in the underlined passage was mis-typed. Can you find it?
 
um..
I guess that "what is a passage if generally about."
It is correct?
 
No. You've added an extra word. You have to change one letter in the underlined phrase.
 
I certainly don't understand what the passage if generally about.

Please read the sentence above carefully. There is a typo. Can you find it? It's the same typo in the original. I think you're getting confused in the original because it's worded as a question. I think you will find it easier in a declarative sentence.
 
I don't know no matter how hard I think about it.:cry:
 
It should be:

what a passsge is generally about
 
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