English, asked by lalitadutta30, 7 months ago

1. Mr Sivasanker said, “The inspector was furi
ous that I didn't consult him before employ
ing him."​

Answers

Answered by damrooandroid
3

Answer:

Mr. Sivasankar said that the inspector was furious that he didn't consult him before employing him.

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Answered by varindagarg812
0

Answer:

Concept:

Split sentence

A split sentence is one in which the defendant is allowed to serve up to half of his sentence. A split infinitive is a grammatical form whereby an adverb or adverbs sentence divides the "to" and "infinitive" parts of a full infinitive, now recognised as a to-infinitive in modern linguistics (e.g. to go). Despite its popularity in everyday speech, orthodox linguists have often prohibited the use of a split infinitive throughout the history of English language aesthetics. "To bravely go where no man has gone before," as shown in the opening scene of the Star Trek tv show, where the adverb boldly was said to divide the whole infinitive, to go. A to-infinitive can be broken into many words, as in "The population is predicted to more than double in the next ten years."

Given:

Mr Sivasanker said, “the inspector was furious that i didn't consult him before employing him"​

Find:

we have to write the sentence in simple format

Answer:

The answer is "Mr. Sivasankar said that the inspector was furious that he didn't consult him before employing him."

=> A split subject is a sentence's subject that appears to be made up of two sections that don't appear next to each other.

If one sentence finishes with a question or exclamation mark followed by a double quotation and the other begins with a lower case letter, the sentences are linked together during post-processing.

Mark the clauses first when dividing sentences. Then, by deleting subordinating linkers and introducing subjects or other words where necessary, make sub-clauses independent.

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