Search from various 영어 teachers...
Emory
[ Grammar ] Noun of Noun
How to interpret the following sentence ?
This unexpected squashing together of lives is like a functional MRI of our relationships with one another, and with ourselves.
-----
unexpected : past participle
squashing : gerund
together : adverb
Q1: There is no nouns before “of lives”, then how can we form “Noun of Noun” structure ?
Q2: Is it reasonable to use the structure “Gerund of Noun” ?
----
Thanks a lot : )
2020년 6월 14일 오후 7:45
답변 · 5
2
I would call “unexpected” an adjective here — it refers to the “squashing together” (a gerund of the phrasal verb “to squash together”, meaning to form into one unit by squashing). The gerund is a noun, so this is indeed a “noun of noun” structure. “Of lives” has the same meaning as the object of the gerund — we could rephrase it as “squashing lives together”. The new version is ambiguous; we can use it as either a gerund phrase or a participle phrase, depending on the context.
2020년 6월 14일
Dear Stephanie,
This sentence came from TIME.
I felt strange at first sight as well. : )
Ref:
https://tinyurl.com/ycmnc6ot
Thanks for your reply. ^_^
2020년 6월 15일
That is very strange sentence. To try to explain I will say that there seems to be a noun before "Of lives" The noun would be the implied action of grouping things. I have heard of gerunds and know that they are -ing words.
S.
2020년 6월 14일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
Emory
언어 구사 능력
중국어(북경어), 중국어(대만어), 영어
학습 언어
영어
좋아할 수도 있는 읽을거리

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
22 좋아요 · 17 댓글

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
17 좋아요 · 12 댓글

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
15 좋아요 · 6 댓글
다른 읽을거리
