I thought the picture was able to/could be taken as the source.

Status
Not open for further replies.

kadioguy

Key Member
Joined
Mar 4, 2017
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
Taiwan
Current Location
Taiwan
Perhaps this?
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/be-expressions-be-able-to-be-due-to

Past achievement: could or was/were able to?​

We usually use was/were able to, not could to talk about past achievements in affirmative clauses. This is because they are facts, rather than possibilities:
Only one person was able to beat the record.
Not: Only one person could beat the record.
We use couldn’t or, more formally, wasn’t/weren’t able to in negative clauses:
We weren’t able to finish the marathon in under four hours. (or We couldn’t finish the marathon …)
 

kadioguy

Key Member
Joined
Mar 4, 2017
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
Taiwan
Current Location
Taiwan

emsr2d2

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Jul 28, 2009
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
British English
Home Country
UK
Current Location
UK
The reason I crossed out "seen" when you used it that way in your previous thread is that I thought you meant "I thought you could see the picture ... and it was the source".
I didn't take "I thought the picture could be seen as XXX" to mean "I thought the picture could be considered to be XXX".
 

Barque

Banned
Joined
Nov 3, 2022
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
English
Home Country
India
Current Location
Singapore
Why is (a) not correct?
I don't think it's incorrect. It may not be the most obvious choice however, as there are less wordy options.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top