Issue 97 Examples - Ellipsis
I deleted this from the Description section. Here are two examples of elliptical sentences whose missing words are understood by convention. English speakers normally use the shorter forms. * "Fire when ready" means "Fire when <u>you are</u> ready." * "Back to the drawing board" means "<u>We need to go</u> back to the drawing board." Here are three examples of elliptical sentences whose missing words were already used in a previous phrase. * "I drank water, and Bob milk" means "I drank water, and Bob <u>drank</u> milk. * "I drank water, not milk" means "I drank water; <u>I did</u> not <u>drink</u> milk. * "I drank water, and Tom did, too" means "I drank water, and Tom <u>drank water</u>, too."
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Ellipsis is the omission of words that would normally be needed to make a sentence complete, but they are understood either by convention or because they were already used in a previous phrase.
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Here are two examples of elliptical sentences whose missing words are understood by convention. English speakers normally use the shorter forms.
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* "Fire when ready" means "Fire when <u>you are</u> ready."
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* "Back to the drawing board" means "<u>We need to go</u> back to the drawing board."
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Here are three examples of elliptical sentences whose missing words were already used in a previous phrase.
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* "I drank water, and Bob milk" means "I drank water, and Bob <u>drank</u> milk.
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* "I drank water, not milk" means "I drank water; <u>I did</u> not <u>drink</u> milk.
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* "I drank water, and Tom did, too" means "I drank water, and Tom <u>drank water</u>, too."
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### Reasons this is a translation issue
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Readers who see incomplete sentences or phrases may not know what the missing information is if they do not use ellipsis in their language.
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