JbhB682 Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:She ask that he throw the ball.
She ask him to throw the ball.
The first of these implies an
indirect request.
E.g., "Sharon asked that Jim attend the party" implies that Sharon was not actually talking to Jim.
I.e., Sharon told
someone else, "Hey, make sure Jim comes to the party. Then, that person told Jim, "Sharon
asks that you attend the party."
The second means that someone
directly told someone else to throw a ball.
Wow the above explanation by Ron really helps explain the difference in meaning between the two sentences (helping solidify why ASK can be used with command subjunctive or with the infinitive)
I was wondering if experts can do the same for another sentence
We advise THAT he show up on time
vs
We advise him to show up on timeI believe the 1st sentence is wrong. Just wondering experts, if anyone can explain why the 1st is wrong through logic or meaning ?
Both of your sentences are right. While I agree with Ron about the direct-telling or indirect-telling difference he noted, and agree that the GMAT won't test
this direct vs. indirect aspect of this topic, it is false that the GMAT doesn't test command subjunctive
at all.
The GMAT would be agnostic about your two sentences. The meaning difference is so subtle (and both could be right), that the GMAT just wouldn't make you judge whether we (passive-aggressively) advise him indirectly to show up on time or whether we tell him to his face. The GMAT doesn't even get into that kind of tone-policing on the RC questions.
What the GMAT would do is expect you to eliminate an incorrect hybrid of these two sentences, or other incorrect variations. I'll change "he/him" to a name to better make one of my points:
Correct: We advise that Julian show up on time.
Correct: We advise Julian to show up on time.
Wrong: We advise Julian shows up on time.
---> This is the bad hybrid of your two correct examples. "Julian shows up on time" works as a sentence, and so does "We advise Julian." But mushed together, the two clauses are fighting over Julian. (Is he the object of the first verb or the subject of the second??) This sentence is missing the "that" that tells you a new clause is coming.
The GMAT puts this error in wrong answers frequently.Wrong: We advise that Julian should show up on time.
---> With the command subjunctive "that," the "should" is understood, so it's redundant to actually say it here.
Wrong: We advise Julian to be showing up on time.
---> We advise him directly "to do" something, not "to be doing" something, so this is a verb error.