English, asked by nihal1042, 4 months ago

They arrived soon after the word after is a

Answers

Answered by Feirxefett
6

Answer:

“Soon after” is an idiom taken together as an adverb of time. Soon after modifies the verb, arrived.

Note: Your question split the idiom, soon after. These two words go together.

The soon after compares the happening to another happening. This (second) happening - the arrival - is the topic.

Implication: The speaker and the audience are being treated to a comparison of two events. Some event happened before the arrival.

Happening 2 (arrival) was realized a short time after Happening 1 (a particular time or event)

Example: Mary was born exactly at noon on January 1, 2015. Martha, her twin, followed soon after.

Soon after means in a short while, later. It is an adverb referring to a later time as compared with another.

In the example given, soon after modifies the verb, arrived. But it is implied, a first event happened first.

Answered by DakshRaj1234
0

Answer:

"Soon after" is an idiom taken together as an adverb of time. Soon after modifies the verb, arrived.

Note: Your question split the idiom, soon after. These two words go together.

The soon after compares the happening to another happening. This (second) happening the arrival is the topic.

Implication: The speaker and the audience

are being treated to a comparison of two

events. Some event happened before the

arrival.

Happening 2 (arrival) was realized a short time after Happening 1 (a particular time or

event)

Example: Mary was born exactly at noon on January 1, 2015. Martha, her twin, followed soon after.

Soon after means in a short while, later. It is an adverb referring to a later time as compared with another.

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