Kondorosi Senior Member Joined Nov 15, 2009 Member Type Student or Learner Jan 21, 2010 #1 You can draw a parallel between the syntactic stati of 'home' and 'swimming' in the first and second sentence, respectively. Where would you put 'respectively,' Frank?
You can draw a parallel between the syntactic stati of 'home' and 'swimming' in the first and second sentence, respectively. Where would you put 'respectively,' Frank?
Frank Antonson Senior Member Joined Dec 7, 2009 Member Type English Teacher Native Language English Home Country United States Current Location United States Jan 22, 2010 #2 I guess I would have it modifying "draw", but who the hell would write such a sentence anyway? I have no idea what the writer is saying.
I guess I would have it modifying "draw", but who the hell would write such a sentence anyway? I have no idea what the writer is saying.
Kondorosi Senior Member Thread starter Joined Nov 15, 2009 Member Type Student or Learner Jan 22, 2010 #3 Frank Antonson said: I guess I would have it modifying "draw", but who the hell would write such a sentence anyway? I have no idea what the writer is saying. Click to expand... The writer hasn't, either (it is me). ;-) 1. [STRIKE]stati[/STRIKE], statuses Yeah, it is 'draw' to me too.
Frank Antonson said: I guess I would have it modifying "draw", but who the hell would write such a sentence anyway? I have no idea what the writer is saying. Click to expand... The writer hasn't, either (it is me). ;-) 1. [STRIKE]stati[/STRIKE], statuses Yeah, it is 'draw' to me too.
Frank Antonson Senior Member Joined Dec 7, 2009 Member Type English Teacher Native Language English Home Country United States Current Location United States Jan 22, 2010 #4 I liked "stati" -- a little bit of Latin scholarship showing.
Kondorosi Senior Member Thread starter Joined Nov 15, 2009 Member Type Student or Learner Jan 22, 2010 #5 Frank Antonson said: I liked "stati" -- a little bit of Latin scholarship showing. Click to expand... No word stati in the English language. :-o
Frank Antonson said: I liked "stati" -- a little bit of Latin scholarship showing. Click to expand... No word stati in the English language. :-o