"The philologist delighted in inventing witty neologisms" DECODED
The is an article, philologist is the simple subject, delighted in this context is an intransitive verb, in inventing witty neologisms is the prepositional phrase with in as the preposition, inventing as a gerund and object of the preposition, and witty as the adjective modifier of neologisms, which is the object of the gerund.
"Neologisms" is the direct object of the verb "inventing" in the sentence.
The pronoun in the sentence, 'him', is correct if the one the sentence refers to is a male. The pronoun 'him' is a singular, objective, personal pronoun which is functioning as the object of the preposition 'at'.The preposition 'at' is not the best choice, a better choice is 'for' (were delighted for him).Note: The word 'both' can function as an indefinite pronoun when it takes the place of a noun. However, in this sentence, it functions as an adjective, describing the nouns 'teachers and students'.Example use as a pronoun: The teachers and the students were both delighted...
The word "seemed" is used to indicate that something appears a certain way, suggesting that it may not be the actual truth. For example, "She seemed happy during the party" implies that the person appeared happy, but may not have been genuinely so.
A police patrol car drives down the motorway with a bubble of law abiding motorists surrounding it. I love to chew bubble gum. My mum makes use of yesterdays left over mashed potato and cabbage to make bubble and squeak.
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
No, the sentence "Judge a man by his words not his actions" is not an assertive sentence. It is an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction.
I'm studying to be a classical philologist!
She was delighted by the gift. They delighted the crowd with their theatrics.
He was very delighted listening that he stood first in class. This is the sentence using the word delighted.
The university's most renowned philologist has just confirmed your interpretation of the symbols. When dealing with dead languages, even a philologist cannot be sure what a text was meant to say.
I was delighted to be answering such a simple question.
The children were delighted with their new toys. The mayor is delighted to host a visit from our state's governor. The nursing home residents were delighted by the holiday concert put on by the kindergarten class.
first find the word in dic and write it........................so stupit
I would be delighted to come to the party shrieked Amy.
He had arrived unexpectedly and they were delighted to see him.
I was delighted to have Ice-Cream for breakfast.
Yes, the objective, personal pronoun 'him' functioning as the object of the preposition 'at' is the correct form.However, the preposition 'at' is a bit clumsy. A more appropriate preposition in this sentence is 'for'.Example: Both the teachers and the students were delighted for him receiving such high scores.This is easier to see when the sentence is simplified, "Teachers and students were delighted for him."
Your sounds of delighted merriment drew my attention to the room.