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الموضوع: very important

  1. #1
    انجليزي جديد
    تاريخ التسجيل
    May 2009
    المشاركات
    4
    معدل تقييم المستوى
    56

    Awt12 very important

    pleas help me in writting(write 5 sentence with this expresstion |because of |due to |as aresult |resulted in |the result is\was (that)?. مو مشكلة لو انه جملة وحدة تستخدم مع التعبيرات

  2. #2
    مميز الصورة الرمزية حسام III
    تاريخ التسجيل
    Apr 2009
    الدولة
    Somewhere in Islands
    المشاركات
    233
    معدل تقييم المستوى
    85

    رد: very important

    [LEFT]Different due to because of . . .

    The word pairs “because of” and “due to” are not interchangeable. The reason they are not is that they “grew up” differently in the language.
    “Because of” grew up as an adverb; “due to” grew up as an adjective. Remember that adjectives modify only nouns or pronouns, whereas adverbs usually modify verbs. (The fact that adverbs occasionally modify other adverbs or even adjectives and entire phrases is not relevant to this particular discussion.)
    To be more precise, with their attendant words, “due to” and “because of” operate as adjectival and adverbial prepositional phrases. To understand how the functions of “due to” and “because of” vary, look at these sentences.

    1. His defeat was due to the lottery issue.
    2. He was defeated because of the lottery issue.
    In sentence #1, his is a possessive pronoun that modifies the noun defeat. The verb “was” is a linking verb. So, to create a sentence, we need a subject complement after the verb “was.” The adjectival prepositional phrase “due to the lottery issue” is that complement, linked to the subject by “was.” Thus, it modifies the noun defeat.
    But in sentence #2, the pronoun "he" has become the sentence's subject. The verb is now “was defeated.” As reconstructed, “He was defeated” could in fact be a complete sentence. And “due to” has nothing to modify. It's an adjective, remember? It can't very well modify the pronoun “he,” can it?
    Neither can it refer to “was defeated” because adjectives don't modify verbs. Sentence 2, therefore, should read: “He was defeated because of the lottery issue.” Now the “why” of the verb “was defeated” is explained, properly, by an adverbial prepositional phrase, “because of.”
    In informal speech, we probably can get by with such improper usage as “His defeat was because of the lottery issue,” and “He was defeated due to the lottery issue.” But we shouldn't accept that kind of sloppiness in writing. We don't want to look stupid among those in the audience who know better. [/LEFT

    These two phrases are kind of opposites; we use result from to express the cause and result in to express the result.

    Want examples? Of course!

    <ul>[*]Exposure to cold can result in death.[*]Exposure from cold can result from spending too much time outdoors.[*]Joe's lie resulted in his dismissal from his job.[*]Joe's lie resulted from his lack of confidence.[/list]
    Clear now? Hope so !]

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  1. Very Important - Big Virus Coming !!!
    بواسطة the snake في المنتدى منتدى تعليم اللغة الانجليزية
    مشاركات: 0
    آخر مشاركة: 06-08-2008, 02:57 AM

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