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Re: Comparison and Omission: when to omit [#permalink]
J2S2019 wrote:
ELLIPSES or omission is valid till the point where this omission does not create any new ambiguity in the sentence.

1. Their descendants had migrated as far north as the other kind of bee (had migrated). - Here we have not introduced the verb again, but it is necessary here to repeat, not because of illogical meaning, but we are using "as" to compare an entire clause with a noun phrase, which is not correct. We have to compare apple to apple, "as" to compare to complete clauses & "Like" to compare nouns.

2. Their descendants had migrated as far north as the other kind of bee had (migrated). - "migrated" ommision is correct here, something as the main verb is the action performed by both the entities.

Hope this helps :)

Here, "had migrated' has been used as "past participle". We can consider "had" as past form of "have" when it is used as "past indefinite tense". But, when "had" is being used with "past participle of verb" it is actually considered as "past perfect tense".

Now, how do someone convinced that if "migrated" is removed from the sentence, then "had' is not used as "past form of have"?
Thanks__
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Re: Comparison and Omission: when to omit [#permalink]
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