Taka
Senior Member
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2004
- Member Type
- Other
- Native Language
- Japanese
- Home Country
- Japan
- Current Location
- Japan
There is plenty of evidence to support the thesis of a species-determined limit to life span. Among the most obvious clues is the great variability in the maximum attainable age between animal groups, existing coincident with the highly specific longevity of each individual species.
About 'existing',
question #1: What 'exists' here? The maximum attainable age between animal groups?
question #2: About the usage of the adjective 'coincident' after the intransitive 'exist(ing)', is it grammatically the same kind as, say, 'young' in 'He died young'? Or is it something else?
About 'existing',
question #1: What 'exists' here? The maximum attainable age between animal groups?
question #2: About the usage of the adjective 'coincident' after the intransitive 'exist(ing)', is it grammatically the same kind as, say, 'young' in 'He died young'? Or is it something else?