Tuesday, November 26, 2019
3 Types of Errors in Interpolated Coordination
3 Types of Errors in Interpolated Coordination 3 Types of Errors in Interpolated Coordination 3 Types of Errors in Interpolated Coordination By Mark Nichol Errors in sentences with interpolated coordination, in which a phrase providing additional information is inserted but punctuation and/or words that provide complementary structure are omitted or misplaced, are frequently made but easily avoided, as explained in the discussion and demonstrated in the revision following each example below. 1. It is widely regarded as one of, if not the, greatest films ever made. The flaw in this sentence is simple to detect- simply omit the parenthetical phrase: ââ¬Å"It is widely regarded as one of greatest films ever made.â⬠If the base sentence is syntactically flawed, then the same sentence, with interpolated wording, is also incorrectly constructed. To repair the damage, word the base sentence so that it stands on its own (ââ¬Å"greatest filmsâ⬠must be preceded by the article the within the base sentence), and revise the parenthetical phrase so that it complements the corresponding phrase in the base sentence (ââ¬Å"greatest filmsâ⬠cannot serve both the base sentence and the parenthetical phrase): ââ¬Å"It is widely regarded as one of the greatest films, if not the greatest film, ever made.â⬠An alternative revision that interpolates the parenthetical phrase early but is not as elegant is ââ¬Å"It is widely regarded as, if not the greatest film, one of the greatest ever made.â⬠2. Mobile apps perform the same or better than they did a year ago. Here, the phrase ââ¬Å"or better thanâ⬠is not technically a parenthetical phrase because it is not punctuated (though some writers would do so), but it serves the same function- it interpolates additional wording into the base sentence, in this case ââ¬Å"Mobile apps perform the same they did a year ago.â⬠But notice the flaw here: The comparative phrase ââ¬Å"the same asâ⬠is missing a word, so revise as shown here: ââ¬Å"Mobile apps perform the same as or better than they did a year ago.â⬠Without this insertion, the erroneous implication is that than serves as a conjunction for both same and better when, according to grammatical rules, it supports only the latter word. 3. Membership or inviting support for the organization is a criminal offense that carries a sentence of up to ten years. A missing word is the problem here, too, but this time it is an absent preposition- membership requires its own preposition so that, similar to the problem in the previous example, it is not misunderstood to share for with ââ¬Å"inviting supportâ⬠: ââ¬Å"Membership in or inviting support for the organization is a criminal offense that carries a sentence of up to ten years.â⬠(Again, the interpolation ââ¬Å"or inviting support forâ⬠could be treated as a parenthesis with bracketing punctuation, but doing so is unnecessary.) Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Grammar category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:Program vs. ProgrammeOne Fell SwoopPreposition Mistakes #1: Accused and Excited
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