jigneshbharati
Junior Member
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2008
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Gujarati
- Home Country
- UK
- Current Location
- UK
Is 'the only fly in the ointment being the fact that I'll have to sit next to my mother-in-law.' a phrase?Using 'is' introduces a comma splice - probably the reason for "being the fact".
"... being that I'll have to sit ..." is also correct
Note my corrections above. Take care with your spacing around punctuation.I'm looking forward to Sunday, the only fly in the ointment being the fact that I'll have to sit next to my mother-in-law.
This is the definition for the idiom "fly in the ointment" from Cambridge Dictionary. What is the grammatical function of "being the fact" here?andWhat part of speech does it belong to?
Is 'the only fly in the ointment being the fact that I'll have to sit next to my mother-in-law no full stop here' a phrase?
I mean in grammatical terminology.Are you asking us if it's a set phrase, or if the complete string of words make up a phrase (in grammatical terminology)?
Is #1 weirder than #2?
I mean as a non English-native speaker, when I read #1, I feel the using of 'being' is very weird; when I read #2, I feel it's much easy to understand; and #3 is grammatically wrong. Is this correct?What do you mean?
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