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ImagineGrammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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#4
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I should have added an article for clarity, and probably shouldn't have confused the issue with an unrelated grammatical example. Sorry about that.
This is an imagine of us at the zoo. (British English) This is a picture of us at the zoo. (American English) By the way, "I pictured what he would look like in clothes like that and laughed." = "I imagined what he would look like in clothes like that and laughed." Note that neither of these synonymous examples has a prepositional phrase playing the role of the direct object; there is a noun clause in that role, introduced with the relative conjunction 'what'. In fact, the quotation from the book in the initial post, where 'imagined' is followed by 'coming', is another example of a direct object immediately following the verb; 'coming' is a gerund (which is always a noun) and it is the verb's object. Indeed, the writer could have omitted the introductory preposition in the second clause, starting it with the relative conjunction 'what', and it would still make perfect sense. -Harry imagined coming here with Dumbledore, what a bond ... Last edited by Rusty; September 07, 2015 at 08:45 PM. Reason: augmented |
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