RonPurewal Wrote:thanghnvn Wrote:Ron, pls, help. I do not understand above explanation. Pls, explain carefully and with an example. Thank you a lot.
here's an example:
ron has a very full schedule this week, with every one of his available time slots occupied.--> this sentence works, because "with" actually
applies to ron and/or his schedule -- i.e., ron is the person with those occupied time slots, and/or his schedule is actually the thing with those time slots.
[edited] -- the explanation i originally wrote here was in error.
quick question about Ron's example. when I see the "with" modifier, I usually look into two places for the thing being modified.
(1). nearest noun, or nearest verb, since it could be an adj/advb prep phrase.
would the modifier in the example work as modifying the verb "has"?
"Ron has, with everyone of his time slots occupied, a tight schedule"
Also, Ron mentioned that the preposition could modify "Ron himself"
"Ron, with everyone of his time slots occupied, has a tight schedule". This makes perfect sense, but i thought if the preposition is going to modify a noun it must at least touch the noun or only be intervened by another modify (not a clause).
did Ron mean that the prep modifier is actually kind of like a subject / verb modifier where it is modifying "Ron has" as a clause together in one? Then I assume Ron means it is an adverb prep modifier.