Obligated: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with " “Obligated” is only a word if you have some kind of aversion to verbs: It is a {{tag|verb}}, inevitably used in the passive (I am ''obliged'') that was then nom..."
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
“[[Obligated]]” is only a word if you have some kind of aversion to verbs: It is a {{tag|verb}}, inevitably used in the passive (I am ''[[obliged]]'') that was then [[nominalisation|nominalised]] into a {{tag|noun}} (I am subject to an ''obligation'') and then inexpertly converted {{isdaprov|back}} to a {{tag|verb}} again (I am ''[[obligated]]''). There's a better, active, English verb: “[[must]]”.
“[[Obligated]]” is only a word if you have some kind of aversion to verbs: It is a {{tag|verb}}, inevitably used in the passive (I am ''[[obliged]]'') that was then [[nominalisation|nominalised]] into a {{tag|noun}} (I am subject to an ''obligation'') and then inexpertly converted {{isdaprov|back}} to a {{tag|verb}} again (I am ''[[obligated]]''). There's a better, active, English verb: “[[must]]”.

Revision as of 17:42, 13 September 2016

Obligated” is only a word if you have some kind of aversion to verbs: It is a verb, inevitably used in the passive (I am obliged) that was then nominalised into a noun (I am subject to an obligation) and then inexpertly converted back to a verb again (I am obligated). There's a better, active, English verb: “must”.