Wednesday, November 6, 2019
5 More Examples of Misplaced Modifiers
5 More Examples of Misplaced Modifiers 5 More Examples of Misplaced Modifiers 5 More Examples of Misplaced Modifiers By Mark Nichol Make sure that when you shoehorn additional information into a sentence, it is being wedged in at a location where its relationship to a word or phrase is clear. Each of the following sentences suffers from ambiguity because of sloppy syntax; the discussions and revisions clear the confusion. 1. Many students let friends and family know they were safe in social media posts. The sentence implies that students found safety within social media posts, but the fact that such posts were the medium by which students communicated their safe status to friends and family is best relocated to immediately after the subject: ââ¬Å"Many students used social media to let friends and family know they were safe.â⬠(This revision also places the key word, safe, where it is most effectively located- at the end of the sentence.) 2. Millennials consist of people born from 1980 to 2000; to put it more simply for them, since they grew up not having to do a lot of math in their heads, thanks to computers, their demographic group consists mostly of teens and twentysomethings. The location of ââ¬Å"thanks to computersâ⬠creates initial ambiguity: Does it modify the preceding phrase, or the one that follows? Computers bear the blame for millennialsââ¬â¢ lack of facility with cranial computation, or the age range of their demographic group is credited to computers? The former choice is the correct one, obviously, but itââ¬â¢s not clear until after the first or even second reading. To clarify the sentenceââ¬â¢s intent, that parenthetical phrase should appear earlier in the sentence: ââ¬Å"To put it more simply for millennials, since, thanks to computers, they grew up not having to do a lot of math in their heads, their demographic group consists mostly of teens and twentysomethings.â⬠Better yet, to reduce comma clutter, write, ââ¬Å"Millennials consist of people born from 1980 to 2000; to put it more simply for them- since, thanks to computers, they grew up not having to do a lot of math in their heads- their demographic group consists mostly of teens and twentysomethings.â⬠3. The Financial Conduct Authority is a financial regulatory body that operates independently of the UK government, whose responsibilities include maintaining financial market integrity. The simplest solution for this sentence- which unintentionally states that the UK government, rather than the Financial Conduct Authority, bears the specified responsibility- is to merely replace the comma with and to create a compound modifying phrase. But a more elegant solution is to place the trailing modifying phrase as a mid-sentence parenthetical comment: ââ¬Å"The Financial Conduct Authority, whose responsibilities include maintaining financial market integrity, is a financial regulatory body that operates independently of the UK government.â⬠4. In fact, if employers do not reinforce learning, the forgetting curve shows that about 80 percent of important workplace information can be forgotten in the first month. According to this sentence, the failure of employers to reinforce learning causes the forgetting curve to demonstrate the percentage of key workplace information forgotten within a month. But the forgetting curve needs no such prompting. ââ¬Å"The forgetting curveâ⬠is the subject, and it should be nearer the head of the sentence (after a brief modifying tag): ââ¬Å"In fact, the forgetting curve shows that if employers do not reinforce learning, about 80 percent of important workplace information can be forgotten in the first month.â⬠5. If a third party is to be given consumersââ¬â¢ personal information, such as an auditing organization, data should be anonymized. An auditing organization is identified in this sentence as an example of consumersââ¬â¢ personal information. But an auditing organization is an example of a third party, so that parenthetical phrase should immediately follow ââ¬Å"third partyâ⬠: ââ¬Å"If a third party, such as an auditing organization, is to be given healthcare consumersââ¬â¢ consumersââ¬â¢ personal information, data should be anonymized.â⬠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:Writing a Reference Letter (With Examples)On Behalf Of vs. In Behalf OfQuiet or Quite?
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