• aramis87
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    103 months ago

    … am I the only one who didn’t have problems with the headline?

    • @stoly
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      13 months ago

      People read around here?

    • @[email protected]
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      -13 months ago

      I came across this several hours later and just now realized there needs to be a comma after the word “Stealing”. I thought it was some new weird ass wall street economic crime term, “stealing speaks”?

      • @[email protected]
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        83 months ago

        No, there should not be a comma there. “The $10 million Eric Adams is charged with” is the subject of the sentence. If you make it less complex, like “the money speaks to a vaster plot”, it should be obvious that “the money, speaks to a vaster plot” is incorrect.

        The mess of prepositions does make it awkward, but there’s nothing incorrect about it. It could easily be made more clear with phrasing like “Eric Adams’ $10m theft charge indicates a larger plot”. You could spice it up with more colorful synonyms if you want, but I would still avoid “speaks”.

        • lemmyng
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          3 months ago

          Another way to put it that shows that there should be no comma : “Eric Adams is charged with stealing $10M. This speaks to a larger plot.”

            • lemmyng
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              33 months ago

              Hah, you caught it before the edit. I had rewritten the sentence and the comma was a leftover from the previous syntax.