When phrases or clauses are misplaced in a sentence, such that they don’t agree with the subject, sometimes funny or even embarrassing meanings and images will result. Danglers are difficult for us to spot when we write them because we can’t always see that what we have written is not what we meant to express.
Example: While walking across the street, the bus hit her.
Did the bus really walk across the street?
Correction:
While she was walking across the street, the bus hit her. OR
The bus hit her while she was walking across the street.
Example: I have some pound cake that Mollie baked in my lunch bag.
Did Mollie actually bake the pound cake in my lunch bag?
Correction: In my lunch bag, I have some pound cake that Mollie baked.
Now that you are alerted to danglers, perhaps you will be able to appreciate some of the bloopers below (not all of which contain danglers) even more. Thank you to Hu O. for sending these.
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Rule 7
Place modifiers near the words they modify.
Incorrect:
I have some pound cake Mollie baked in my lunch bag.
Correct:
In my lunch bag, I have some pound cake that Mollie baked.
Is the point of this sentence that the cake was made by Mollie and nobody else, or should it have been
“In my lunch bag, I have some pound cake which Mollie baked.”?
Or did I get that wrong?
The point of the incorrect sentence is that it reads as though Mollie somehow used a lunch bag in which to bake a cake.
Here’s one of my favorites from my 8th grade students (we were studying adverbs):
“Walking briskly down the street, an apple fell from the tree.”
Good one!
“Roger is driving home, he’s lost, it’s getting dark, and he is running out of petrol.”
Please explain why this is not considered a comma splice.
The sentence is written as a series of four items with the connector and before the last independent clause. Omitting and would result in a comma splice (see Rules 3a and 3b of Commas). The four independent clauses could be recast as separate sentences, as a series of individual clauses using the present progressive tense (as below), or in other ways; it’s a matter of style.
Roger is driving home, becoming lost, losing daylight, and running out of petrol.
Why are all the negative comments about church activities?
We can all benefit from laughing at ourselves from time to time. They aren’t negative comments, but rather examples of everyday writings that intended to instruct but became humorous because of inadvertent dangling modifiers.
This is the best laugh I’ve had all day! Thank you!
We’re glad you enjoyed it.