the missing word bothers me, too. It also got killed in an intersection on its way to work, to show up in this meme.

  • @3ntranced@lemmy.world
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    45 hours ago

    To everyone who can’t figure out the missing word, it’s “the people once tied to them ‘WERE’ killed in crosswalks…”

    • @caden
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      54 hours ago

      I think it’s correct as-is. Inserting a “were” would make that clause read as independent. With how the sentence is currently structured, that doesn’t work.

      That’s not to say you couldn’t have

      The tracks are now unruley [sic] and wild—the people once tied to them were killed in crosswalks by giant trucks

      if you want, but the comma needs to change to something like a dash or a semicolon. With a comma (i.e., as a subordinate clause), “were” doesn’t make sense.

  • ignirtoq
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    48 hours ago

    I’ve read it 3 times, and I can’t find a missing word. It makes sense to me. What word is missing?

    • @lugal@lemmy.ml
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      1213 hours ago

      You don’t see it because it’s missing

      I answered the comment below you but I couldn’t resist this stupid joke

    • Track_ShovelOP
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      13 hours ago

      A comma maybe, then.

      the people once tied to them killed in a crosswalk’ really sounds weird to me.

      Heck, my phone agrees.

      • @itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        210 hours ago

        Seems like a stylistic choice to me. Leaving out the “have been” makes it sound more poetic, but I don’t think it’s wrong per se

      • @Mac@mander.xyz
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        110 hours ago

        Grammar has so many “technically correct” yet odd sentence structures.
        The sentence definitely has a weird flow and could absolutely contain reader assistance via punctuation.

      • Zagorath
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        313 hours ago

        I think a colon would be the most apt punctuation here.

        The tracks are now unruly and wild, the people tied to them: killed in crosswalks

        But to be honest I was fine with no punctuation. The bit that most bothers me is the choice of preposition. You don’t go in a crosswalk. You go on it. Or maybe you’re at the crosswalk when you’re killed. But certainly not in.

      • @lugal@lemmy.ml
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        213 hours ago

        Not a native speaker but for me it sounds fine. The “are now” is left out because it would be repeated if that makes sense.

        “The people, [who were] tied to them, [are now] killed in a crosswalk.”