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- Jan 12, 2010
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Please reply my post.
Please reply my post.
But I still want to know whether it is grammatical or not. I hate to be told that I wrote ungrammatical sentences. You said it is correct to say, " I had not arrived at a decision to read more, until I found a mistake yesterday." To invert the sentence, I get my sentence, which goes," Not until yesterday had I arrived at a decision to read more, when I was struck my grammatical mistake." Now I am getting into a dillema where I don't know if I should make alterations or not. To change the sentence make it feel like it was not written by me. Can I find a similar sentence structure in some old English novels like those written by Charles Dickesn?
Please be patient with me. I have another question. Can I open a novel with a sentence like this, " I was groping among the darkness, but I couldn't..." I didn't specify the time. Is that OK?
Thank you very much.
Is it awkward and difficult to understand because I didn't tell my readers clearly which one of the two acts happened first? Is it because the phrase, " not until " can never be used like that, with past perfect? Is there a grammatical rule which forbids this sentence structure?
If it is grammatical, I can accept the sentence, for it describes my thoughts honestly. In my original sentence, it does not include an intention to clarify which act occured first.
I am still debating with myself, whether I should make alterations or not.
Please answer my post.
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