Shana
Hi! I know AI can make mistake, but is this a mistake? I was asking another question, but it generously pointed out another issue, saying "The song is much pleasing to the ear" is non-standard modern English. I copied the sentence from a textbook, and I know the sentence's tone is unusual in daliy use, but "non-stanard in modern"? I did not know modern English has such a clear boundary. This sentence is natural to me though, so I don't think it is not modern?🥺
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Two quick comments: 1 - "much pleasing" is nonstandard. 2 - "pleasing" is a present participle, not a gerund.
٢٤ أكتوبر ٢٠٢٤ ١٠:٣٠
A participle is called a "gerund" when it acts as a noun. Here's an example of "pleasing" used as a noun: "Pleasing you is my intention". In your example, "pleasing" is an adjective. We do not say "much pleasing", although I know of no purely grammatical reason not to. We just don't do it. The only adjectives we modify with "much" are comparative ones like "better" ("the song is much better"). Instead, say "the song is very pleasing" "the song is so pleasing" "the song is quite pleasing". You could say "The song has much that is pleasing to the ear". In that sentence, "much" acts as a pronoun rather than an adverb.
٢٤ أكتوبر ٢٠٢٤ ١٤:٣٠
Yes, the AI is correct-- we would use 'very' and not 'much' with 'pleasing.' I don't know if 'much pleasing' would ever have been commonly used; it sounds like a typical mistake that some non-native speakers (or textbooks) might say. 'Very much' is commonly used, but usually in the past tense: I was very much pleased by the service at the restaurant. The help was very much appreciated. I enjoyed the meal very much.
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