We have some articulated and talented wordsmiths here on The Lounge. Anyone want to hazard a guess at what, 'fronted non-finite clause' means?
A BBC presenter and professor who revealed she was left stumped by her nine-year-old's homework has since left fellow academics baffled after posting the impossible question online. Alice Roberts, who hosts documentary series Coast, took to her Twitter and shared a picture of the challenging task, which reads: 'There's a lovely example of a fronted non-finite clause on the bottom half of page 45. Can you find and copy it?'
The Professor of Public Engagement in Science at the University of Birmingham, wrote: 'Oh dear. Trying to help the nine-year-old with homework again....' After turning to Twitter, it turns out she wasn't the only one who struggled to find the answer.
'I'm a professional writer and editor of linguistics materials with a Masters in Applied Linguistics, and I have absolutely never needed to know what a "fronted non-finite clause" is,' wrote one, while a second penned: 'I'm also a writer, and I've coached students in academic writing too, and I haven't needed to know what that is either.' Professor Colin Talbot added: 'This grammar zealotry defeated me. Absurd. No-one except linguists needs to know this stuff.'
Happily one tweet did come up with the explanation, Michael Rosen wrote: 'Fronted adverbials are adverbs, adverbial phrases or adverbial clauses that are placed before the main clause eg "Happily, it's over." "In the end, it was over." "When the sun set, it was over,'
In response to Rosen's post, which has since been liked 1.3k times, many who have spent a lifetime working in the industry told how they were left stumped.
There's a slew of Twitter responses, which I won't bore you with, if you tweet you can see for yourself: @theAliceRoberts
Has anyone come across fronted non-finite clause?
I have done a lot of writing, but it was almost all in the engineering and science fields, so I haven't used many "fronted non-finite clauses" and if I ever did I certainly didn't know what they were called.
This reminds me of when mathematicians were allowed to write math textbooks for sixth-graders who were stuck with studying useless things like set theory and using other numerical bases.
The best commentary on that huge mistake came in a "Simpson's" episode in which they found oil on the property of Springfield Elementary. As Principal Skinner said, "Now we can afford to get some math textbooks without that base-6 crap in them."
(It's slightly useful to be aware of binary/base-2, since computers use it, but people don't...)
Old engineering joke: There are 10 kinds of people in the world - those that understand the binary system and those who don't.