Dangling and Misplaced Modifiers

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Dangling and Misplaced Modifiers

Online Writing Center Darton State College

Definitions
A modifier is a word or a word group that makes the meaning of

another word or word group clearer, more specific.


Yawning sleepily, my puppy curled up in my lap to take a nap. (Yawning sleepily

modifies [clarifies/specifies the meaning of] the word puppy.)

A dangling modifier is a word or a word group that does not

clearly and sensibly modifier a word or a word group.


A misplaced modifier is a word or a word group that is placed far

from the word(s) it modifies, muddling the meaning of the sentence.

Dangling Modifiers
Two of the most often misused constructs, as far as modifiers

are concerned, are the verbal phrase and the elliptical clauses
(Butler et al. 205).

A verbal phrase is a group of words in which the verb dominates.


playing the piano, to count to ten, by altering the landscape, etc.

An elliptical phrase is a group of words from which one or more

words have been removed because it (they) is (are) understood from the meaning of the sentence.
When growing up, Sarah loved ice cream. (she was or Sarah was is omitted from

the first part of the sentence because it is understood from the second part).

Dangling Modifiers cont.


The missing words often result in some rather amusing,

albeit incorrect, sentences:


*Reading the newspaper, the sleepy puppy curled up in my lap. (According to this sentence, the sleepy puppy was reading the newspaper.) Possible correction:

As I was reading the newspaper, the sleepy puppy curled up in my lap. (Now it is clear who was doing what.)

* incorrect sentence

More Examples of Dangling Modifiers


* To read with ease, the letter size must be increased. (According to this sentence, the letter size is trying to read with ease.)

Possible solution: To read with ease, Dana must increase the letter size.

*By singing loudly, the beavers got scared. (According to this sentence, the beavers were singing loudly.)

Possible solution: By singing loudly, Dave scared the beavers.

* Wrapped around the fence post, the farmer removed the

encroaching ivy. (According to this sentence, the farmer was wrapped around the fence post.) Possible solution: The farmer removed the encroaching ivy that was wrapped around the fence post.

Misplaced Modifiers
Misplaced relative clauses (clauses that begin with relative

pronouns, such as who, which, and that).


*The proposal was passed into law that restricted the distribution of plastic bags in grocery stores. Possible solution: The proposal that restricted the distribution of plastic bags in grocery stores was passed into law. *Students were asked multiple questions who were waiting for their instructors. Possible solution: Students who were waiting for their instructor were asked multiple questions.

Misplaced Modifiers cont.


Sometimes modifiers happen to fall in a position where they can

modify two sentence elements, making the sentence ambiguous.


The singer mastered the difficult aria that Verdi composed in the later

years of his life. (Because the modifier can refer to both mastered and composed, it is unclear which action was undertaken in the later years of life.) Possible solution (depending on what we are trying to say):
In the later years of his life, the singer mastered the aria that Verdi composed.

A few students were told that they had been suspended by the

principal. (Were the students told or suspended by the principal?) Possible solution (depending on what we are trying to say):
A few students were told by the principal that they had been suspended. A few students were told that the principal had suspended them.

Misplaced Modifiers cont.


Some modifiers are especially prone to be misplaced:
only just almost merely even simply hardly nearly

Sue only ate vegetables for six months. (The sentence means

that Sue ate, but did not, for example, grew, vegetables for six months.) If you wish to say that Sue ate nothing else but vegetables, then say Sue ate only vegetables for six months.

Misplaced Modifiers cont.


Even though we call this error misplaced modifier, is it really

misplaced? The answer depends on what you are trying to express: (Always place the modifier next to or very close to the word(s) it modifies!) 1. Only I saw the debate between Adam and Chris. (I was the only one who saw the debate.) 2. I only saw the debate between Adam and Chris. (I saw but did not, for example, comprehend the debate.) 3. I saw only the debate between Adam and Chris. (I saw nothing else but the debate. I did not see the ensuing fight, for example.) 4. I saw the debate only between Adam and Chris. (Others were debating as well, but the only one I saw was between Adam and Chris.) 5. I saw the debate between only Adam and Chris. (Same as above.)

Work Cited
Butler, Eugenia, Mary Ann Hickman, Patricia J. McAlexander, and Lalla Overby. CorrectWriting. 6th ed. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 1995. Print.

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