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Date: | Tue, 8 Jun 2004 14:09:06 -0500 |
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I would treat "way" as the head of the noun phrase and "he used to" as a
reduced relative clause. It's an asyndetic relative, that is, there is
no relative pronoun or subordinating conjunction "that".
Herb
Subject: Explaining "A WAY"
Fellow Linguists and Other Fond Folks,
Look at the following sentences:
1. He looks like he used to.
2. He looks the way he used
to.
How would you label the phrase "the way" in sentence 2? Is it a
subordinator? It seems to function that way, much as "like" does in the
first sentence.
Your turn.
Marshall Myers
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