Anonymous
Is the sentence "taught to conceal" grammatically correct?
Update:
Or in a poetry sentence
8 Answers
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- Bobby JimLv 75 months ago
First, it is a phrase, not a sentence. So, as a sentence, it is not grammatically correct. There is no subject noun in the phrase, only a verb and an adverb.
- Anonymous5 months ago
This is not a sentence.
It's a sentence fragment.
It could be grammatically correct if used properly.
- CaraLv 75 months ago
It's not a sentence, so how are you using it? If you say something like "Mary was taught to conceal the fact that her father was in prison," there's nothing grammatically wrong with that.
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- ?Lv 75 months ago
Its a sentence fragment. Its not incorrect in itself, but the rest of the sentence would determine whether it was contextually correct
- Anonymous5 months ago
That's barely a phrase.
- Anonymous5 months ago
There is nothing wrong with it as a phrase.
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Depends on context, whether in poetry or prose. Please quote the whole sentence, and background if you think needed. Soldiers are taught how to conceal themselves from the enemy.