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Anonymous
10:38
I don't think they are. So no it's not. — Codeswitcher 6 hours ago
I think "Test that it works" is not a very good sentence.
Anonymous
You think that *Test that it works is ungrammatical because something's wrong with Test that it works?
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Your little edit markers here function like bullet points :-)
@snailboat Hehe.
I think understand the OP's Test that it works. I just think I wouldn't say it.
I probably say "(You) test it and see if it works."
Hmm... "Test if it works" might be possible, but still sounds a little odd to me.
Anonymous
10:55
@DamkerngT. How about whether?
I think whether whether or if sounds the same to me.
It forces me to think that [if it works] is a noun.
0
Q: How to ask a question according to the specific sections?

user48070 (1)I get up early in order to catch a bus. (2)I get up early because I can catch a bus. How to ask a question according to “in order to catch a bus ” and "because I can catch a bus"?

I don't understand the OP's question.
Does he want a question like "Why do you get up early?"?
@snailboat Why isn't it grammatical? I can see that using "that" makes clear that "it" goes with work, but I would never parse the sentence as "[test it] works" .
Anonymous
@Nico If I knew, I would have said instead of just leaving a comment saying it wasn't.
Anonymous
My judgment is that "Test it works" is super ungrammatical.
Unless "Test it" is quoted. :-)
11:03
Could you explain what makes you feel it is ungrammatical?
Anonymous
I can't tell what it means.
Anonymous
It doesn't sound like a sentence.
OK, I see
Anonymous
Even if I know that that is being omitted, I can't fit it through my mental grammartron.
I just wanted to make sure you didn't have any grammatical rule in mind.
Anonymous
11:04
Sorry, I don't have anything more useful to say about it.
Does it sound worng with "that"?
Anonymous
No.
I think I know how you feel
Anonymous
It's often easier to decide if something is grammatical or un- than explain why.
If I was to read that sentence, I would do as:
Test [small pause] it works
Anonymous
11:06
That's also why I put "I think" in my comment. It's just my personal judgment.
but yet, it doens't feel fully tright
Anonymous
But you know how some sentences feel like they're not quite right, and others feel like they're super wrong? This is the latter.
Intriguing...
I think we can verify this by thinking of a sentence that we can't leave out a that.
Anonymous
There are lots of sentences where you can't omit that.
Anonymous
11:09
There are others where you must omit that. (We talked about this a couple months ago)
Anonymous
> [ That they were lying ] is now quite obvious.
Anonymous
> [ * That they were lying ] is now quite obvious.
Anonymous
> Who does she think [ ___ is the ringleader? ]
Anonymous
> Who does she think [ *that ___ is the ringleader? ]
Let's say that we ignore the That at the beginning of a sentence.
11:13
Umm, I'm struggling with "Who does she think [ ___ is the ringleader?]" It sounds correct, but I'm struggling to parse it grammatically.
where is the subject of the relative clause?
It sounds correct to me. Convert it back to a declarative sentence, and it should be obvious, I think.
"The ringleader that she thinks [of] is who"?
Anonymous
@Nico The gap is the subject of the subordinate clause. It's anaphorically linked to who outside the subordinate clause.
But about omitting that, I'm afraid that a lot of people might feel that dropping any other that (except when it's needed to lead a sentence) is fine.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Well, that's demonstrably false.
11:16
Got to go out for a while. BBL
Anonymous
3
A: What's the grammatical structure for "there is nothing a guy can do that even comes close"?

snailboatThis is a declarative existential clause with the dummy subject there and the copular auxiliary be taking a noun phrase (NP) complement: There is [ nothing a guy can do that even comes close ] We can, of course, divide the NP up further. Its head is nothing, which is modified by two relati...

Oh! The system remembers our avatars at any specific time! Neat!
Anonymous
Here I give two reasons that a linearly non-initial that can't be omitted
(Really gotta go. :-)
Anonymous
The exact conditions in which that are somewhat complex. There are several relevant rules.
Anonymous
11:18
I've found myself unable to explain it before, too, though I've done more reading since those times
Anonymous
I suspect there is more that I have yet to learn.
Anonymous
Speaking generally, I think the reason a subordinator sometimes can't be omitted is that it's needed for comprehension--the listener needs a cue that a subordinate clause is coming up
Anonymous
So!
Anonymous
9 mins ago, by snailboat
> [ * That they were lying ] is now quite obvious.
Anonymous
Without that, "they were lying" seems like a main clause.
Anonymous
11:20
You need to give the listener a that so they can understand it as a subordinate clause
Anonymous
But that explanation is a little bit circular. If this sort of subordinate clause could occur unmarked, then listeners would be used to processing them, and they could occur. But since they can't, they don't, so they can't.
Anonymous
So to some extent, it's really just how it is--there's not necessarily a good explanation for why it is that way.
Anonymous
For example, a relative clause with a gap in subject position typically needs a relative word or that at the front to introduce it. You can't omit that.
Anonymous
But in many non-standard varieties of English you can, and it doesn't impede comprehension.
Anonymous
Why can't you do it in Standard English? No reason. You just can't.
Anonymous
11:23
So to come up with an explanation for when that can be omitted, we need to look at how people actually talk and what judgments they make about their sentences.
I'm starting to see how complicated it is. I haven't realised before.
I'm still mystified by your second example:
Who does she think [ ___ is the ringleader? ]
Imagine I remove the dependent clause
Anonymous
It's part of what CGEL calls an unbounded dependency construction.
Who does she think?
it's wrong
Anonymous
@Nico Right, you can't remove it.
Anonymous
So it's a complement of think.
Anonymous
11:28
They don't call it a relative clause.
OK, so @DamkerngT. was suggesting to make it sentence declarative I should've done:
Anonymous
Their term "unbounded dependency construction" is supposed to be a larger category to which relative constructions belong.
She thinks that
Anonymous
The term is pretty opaque sounding--
that = the ringleader is who
Anonymous
11:29
--but they use "unbounded" to mean "there is no upper bound on how deeply the gap may be embedded"
Anonymous
So!
Anonymous
They say that the gap there is coindexed with who outside the subordinate clause
Anonymous
Which makes sense. It's like [ Who is the ringleader? ], right?
but if that was the case, then "who does she think" wouldn't make sense
Anonymous
It's embedded inside a complement clause.
Anonymous
11:31
You can't remove the complement clause. It's a complement.
and the auxiliary-subject inversion?
whay is there an inversion in "who does she think?"
Anonymous
Un-inverted and removing do-support, you get She thinks [ who is the ringleader? ]
Anonymous
Which is an in-situ wh-question
OK, I'm starting to see what they mean by unbounded dependency construction
I don't fully understand it yet, but I'm going to give it a rest and come back to it later.
11:51
@Nico What I meant was something like: She thinks Jenny is the ringleader.
To make a question that will get Jenny as the answer, it would become: Who does she think is the ringleader?
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Yes, or if we take it one step at a time:
Anonymous
> She thinks [ Jenny is the ringleader. ]
Anonymous
> She thinks [ who is the ringleader ] ?
Anonymous
> *She does think [ who is the ringleader ] ?
Anonymous
> Who does she think [ ___ is the ringleader ] ?
11:54
What is strange is that She thinks that Jenny is the ringleader. sounds fine.
But this one does not: *Who does she think that is the ringleader?
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. This is related to the sort of complement that think takes.
Oh, I see. That think would eat that that alive.
And it would sound odd because it will sound like that is the ringleader is what she thinks.
12:50
Prepositions are difficult for learners.
Anonymous
13:06
If you said something was in a plate, I'd think you meant it was somehow lodged in the material (or in a video game or such, overlapping its physical space)
That is what I think.
A fork in a plate sounds like a nice episode for Fringe! :-)
Anonymous
You could stick a fork in a paper plate. It's soft enough.
By the way, I lolx5 reading this: ell.stackexchange.com/a/22964/3281.
Anonymous
Or a styrofoam plate.
Anonymous
Er.
13:08
Oh, a styrofoamy plate is not very Earth friendly.
Anonymous
J.R.'s comment is the best answer.
Anonymous
But because he accidentally left it as a comment, only the other two answers can be voted on.
Anonymous
0
Q: Why is this website English?

Rob QuistNo understand. Want lern very much. site english. i come lern english. site english. how can lern english with only english why?

I think Maulik mixed up served in plate with food on my plate.
Anonymous
What is served in plate?
13:11
Something like "The waiter served our food in plate.", I think.
Anonymous
Hmm. That doesn't sound like a proper sentence to me.
No?
I think of it the way I think of go by bus.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. No.
Anonymous
I don't think I've ever heard it before.
Hmm... looking for 'serve * plate'
Didn't work well. -- retrying with 'serve * in plate'
Oh, it suggested served instead. Nice!
Anonymous
13:17
*Served in plate is also strange.
Oh, it's too rare, and those who used it are probably non-native speakers.
'served * on plate' yields a lot more results.
> Three courses were served entirely on silver plate, en suite, and the banquet was conducted altogether in the style of the most princely Eastern magnificence.
Anonymous
What's that from?
Anonymous
It looks like it contains OCR errors.
I'm not sure. I changed to other pages already.
Anonymous
Yep. That or should be of
13:20
Oh, it's from The Oriental Herald and Journal of General Literature.
Anonymous
The on silver plate part is okay, though.
Anonymous
Generally you won't find plate used that way, though.
Anonymous
You'll either serve {plates/a plate} of something, or you'll serve something on {plates/a plate}
Oh, I just noticed that it's used as an uncountable noun!
So, it's not really like by bus construction?
(Where the article is dropped.)
Scanning through other results, I think the norm is on a plate or on someone's plate.
Hmm... can an OP accept a community wiki answer instead of normal answers?
By the way, I found cake in a plate in a novel titled A Country Doctor:
> [...]; and Mrs. Thacher soon returned with some slices of cake in a plate and some apples held in her apron.
Anonymous
13:29
@DamkerngT. I posted an answer.
Umm.. and another one (which I think is a legit usage) in a novel? called Sex and the Single Transsexual
Anonymous
Haha.
> The cake was in a covered cake plate on top of the refrigerator and I was thinking about having a nice slice of it...day and night...Night and day.
@snailboat Hooray!
Anonymous
What's a cake plate?
A plate for serving cake...
Anonymous
13:30
Since it's a covered plate, it can have an interior, I suppose.
I'm not sure, but I think it has a cover.
Anonymous
That's what I imagined.
It covers it so it can be easily transported
13:31
So I think in a covered plate is legit in this case.
Anonymous
Well, in a covered plate.
Oh, yes.
in the covered cake plate, yeah
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. It might be if context is sufficient, but if you just said a plate and context didn't make it obvious I think people would imagine a plate without a cover. The original says in a covered cake plate
Anonymous
I'm not wise to the world of cake plates, though.
Anonymous
13:34
FumbleFingers just wrote an answer. It seem fine.
A-ha! So a fork in a (covered) plate is possible, but very unlikely, I think. :D
Anonymous
I'm removing my answer and voting this one up. As an aside, on chat Damkerng found "in a covered cake plate": a plate with a cover, I suppose, is conceptualized as having an interior. — snailplane 7 secs ago
Ahh... You don't have to remove yours, I think.
Anonymous
No, I do. I didn't read the question carefully enough.
Anonymous
I'm not always a very careful reader, unfortunately! :-)
13:39
where are y'all from?
Me? Bangkok, Thailand.
Anonymous
I live in California.
Nice
Anonymous
Some people would claim that apostrophe should be to the left of the A.
Anonymous
When I was young, I always typed ya'll, and people always corrected me. :-)
Anonymous
13:41
At some point I stopped saying that word. Maybe California's been a bad influence on me.
go to the south :P
interchangeable round here
Oh, they don't say y'all or ya'll in California?
no, it's a colloquialism
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. We don't really say y'all or you all very much here
Anonymous
Or all y'all!
13:42
Probably you guys, maybe?
Anonymous
Well, I always said you guys
That's common everywhere
@meer2kat Where are you from?
Virginia/Kentucky/Indiana
(Is that picture the real you, btw? :-)
13:44
Yes it is :)
Wow! You look cool!
I was a fan of Indiana Pacer, by the way.
LOL I've never been told I look "cool" hahaha :)
You are, for me. Hehe. :D
@DamkerngT. I don't even know what that is. I've lived here for four months and am moving back to Kentucky where I belong in two days.
@DamkerngT. haha thanks
Well, the first thing that Kentucky reminds me of is fried chicken. :D
13:46
I had some yesterday :)
Hmm.. I was trying to think of things that Virginia reminds me of...
Maybe John Carter. Hahaha. :D
lol
Virginia is very historic
Anonymous
Oh, that in case question brings up a similar case. You can't stick that after in case:
Anonymous
> You'd better take an umbrella [ in case it rains ] .
Anonymous
> *You'd better take an umbrella [ in case that it rains ] .
13:57
Oh, I think we can't have that that indeed, but not sure why.
It's a set pattern, I think.
Anonymous
In case is fossilized.
It is acceptable but doesn't sound good
Anonymous
It does permit an of PP instead of the clause: in case of rain
That sounds like something that a native Spanish speaker would say
Hey, I remember a good line from a movie that uses in case.
> Truman: Good morning, and in case I don't see ya, good afternoon, good evening, and good night!
Anonymous
14:00
> *Truman: Good morning, and [ in case [ that I don't see ya ] ], good afternoon, good evening, and good night!
It would work with "the"
Good morning, and [ in THE case [ that I don't see ya ] ], good afternoon, good evening, and good night!
Anonymous
14:11
Maybe the reason "Test it works" is worse than "Test that it works" is that you start by reading "test it", and "it" looks like the direct object of "test", so you need a subordinator like "that" to tell you that "it works" is a subordinate clause
Anonymous
Otherwise the sentence is confusing.
That explanation sounds quite good.
(I still think that Test to see if it works. or simply Test if it works. sounds better than Test that it works.)
Anonymous
Maybe if test were used with a that-clause more often, it would be omissible because we'd consider that construction as we read it
Anonymous
But as it is, it's less usual, so we need the marker of subordination to let us know what the structure iss
Anonymous
> accept, add, allege, care, claim, consider, contend, decide, dispute, fear, feel, find, forget, gather, guess, hope, imagine, maintain, presume, realize, reason, reflect, rejoice, suppose, suspect, think, threaten, vote, wonder, worry
14:20
Somehow I think I think it works and I hope it works are both fine, but I accept it works and I reason it works are not as fine.
But all seem to be fine in a different construction: It works, I xxxx. For example, It works, I think.
Anonymous
I started a trend! Three people deleted their answers and upvoted FumbleFingers's, I think :-)
Three already?
Anonymous
I feel kind of guilty! All that answer-devastation
Anonymous
musicinmybrain and CoolHandLouis deleted their answers.
Anonymous
0
A: "in the plate" or "on the plate"

Mohammad NazarPlate:a flat, usually round, dish that you put food on E.g., sandwiches on a plate

Anonymous
14:24
Is this Not An Answer?
Anonymous
I'm not sure...
I would say it's definitely not a good answer.
But whether it is an answer or not, I'm not sure either.
Oh, I think this doesn't work: It works, I test.
Anonymous
I think that is a pretty strange use of topicalization.
Anonymous
Or whatever you want to call it.
Even That it works, I test. is barely able to pass my filter.
Anonymous
14:27
"It works, I think." is okay.
Most of the verbs you listed could pass this topicalization test.
(I didn't try all of them, but it looks like all of them could work.)
@snailboat You've answered this question beautifully.
 
2 hours later…
16:49
Hi
17:04
I was going through the conversation about "Test it works" and I'm thinking that "Test that it works" and "Test whether it works" are not equivalent. I would use the first one if I was expecting it to work, and the second if I wanted to know whether it works. When I think of "Test it works", the meaning feels closer to "Test that it works".
I was going through some ngrams and I found a sentence that sounds good and is similar:
> "Be sure to test that it is working"
I wonder if:
> "Be sure to test it is working"
also sounds off.
I think snailboat could answer this. I still have a problem with "Test that it works" though. If the intended meaning is not "Test to see if it works", then it should be something like "Ensure that it works", and I think that test shouldn't be used like that. Though I understand that colloquially, people might say that.
(I also think that there is something wrong with "Be sure to test that it is working.")
Perhaps the usage of test is changing.
17:21
I'm starting to think that snailboat got it when she said that the problem is that "test" is not often used with a that-clause.
gotta go

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