Great opportunity to enhance my understanding of a certain type of modifier.
The Official Answer referenced here:
(D) …… investors heard a presentation on the challenges facing the company, AMONG THEM the threat of……suit and the decline in sales…”
Modified (E) —- suggestion that this version might be correct:
(E) US Senator Daniel Inouye was appointed to several posts within the Democratic Party during his first term, AMONG THEM assistant majority whip…….and vice-chair…..”
My question, even though any answer would be complete speculation since we never know for sure (in a vacuum) whether a version will be considered correct relative to others:
Does the insertion of the adverbial modifier “during his first term” cause issues for the modification of “several posts” by the ‘Subgroup Modifier’ (“among them X and Y”)?
In OA (D), we have one noun phrase with a restrictive noun modifier prior to the (comma) + “among them…..”
“……challenges facing the company, among them…”
However, in the version speculated about (E in the current problem with the removal of “being”), isn’t it the case that we still have the issue of the intervening adverbial modifier?
WHEN was he appointed? “during the first term”
Stated in a different way, does the fact that this adverbial prep. phrase modifier intervenes even matter?
Or, more directly (and admittedly more obnoxiously), do you agree with this conjecture?
This is called “my falling down a rabbit hole after midnight”…..
Sage Pearce-Higgins Wrote:Thanks for sharing that (you can always post a problem number if that's easier). Well done for making that connection, and it's a nice example of a 'subgroup modifier', and suggests that answer E of the Daniel Inouye problem would be okay without the word 'being'.
Check out chapter 1 of All the Verbal Companion for more on Subgroup modifiers.