Phrases such as "make great efforts to," "pay attention to," and "do a good job in" are sometimes perfectly legitimate: "we must make great efforts in education" conveys meaning. And even when such a phrase serves to introduce another verb, it is not necessarily superfluous: "we must make great efforts to overcome this difficulty" may indicate that the task will be particularly arduous. 去书内

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    For example, the noun phrase expressing time is not always redundant with the verb tense: "at present it is necessary to…"may mean that the necessity is only temporary. The usually worthless category noun can occasionally perform a valid function: "in accordance with the principle of self-reliance, all army units should… ."

    2026-04-15 喜欢(0) 回复(0)