Posted by rfvv on Wednesday, September 3, 2014 at 7:22am.
Posted by rfvv on Friday, August 29, 2014 at 11:22pm.
1.Thank you for visiting our nursing home. It was great fun last weekend.
------------------------
In Sentence 1, what does 'It" refer to?
2. Look at the elderly person.
3. Look at the elderly people.
---------------
Are both OK? Is Sentence 2 grammatical? Can we use the singular noun after 'elderly'?
English - PsyDAG, Friday, August 29, 2014 at 11:46pm
1. The visit.
Elderly can be used to modify both.
================
Thank you for your help.
1.Thank you for visiting our nursing home. It was great fun last weekend.
------------------------
In Sentence 1, what does 'It" refer to?
(Q1: You said it refers to 'the visit.' Can it also mean 'visiting our nursing home'? Or Is 'it' an impersonal pronoun?)
(Q2: What does 'last weekend'modify? What is the part of speech of 'last weekend'? Is 'last weekend' an adverbial phrase or an adjective phrase?)
English - Writeacher, Wednesday, September 3, 2014 at 7:48am
"It" is one of those impersonal nouns, but yes, it seems to modify "visiting..." (the whole phrase).
The phrase "last weekend" is adverbial, telling when the action happened.
===============================
===============================
Thank you for your help.....
The following is my first question.
In the second sentence, does "It" in "It was great...." mean "visiting our nursing home" or 'The visit"? Or does it mean 'an impersonal pronoun which refers to an ambiguous situation or thing?
1. Thank you for visiting our nursing home. It was great fun last weekend.
------------------------
In Sentence 1, what does 'It" refer to?
3 answers
It's an impersonal pronoun, which seems to refer to the whole idea of "visiting our nursing home" or simply to the visit itself.
In my opinion....if "It" refers to "visiting our nursing home' or "the visit," then "It" might/may mean "a
< personal > pronoun"? Am I wrong?
1. There is not just one noun that is its antecedent.
2. It doesn't refer to a person.