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		Grammar and Linguistics > "to be able to"     
			
		 "to be able to" 
		
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 hieu_ngoc
 
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							| "to be able to" 
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							|  Hello,   Here is a sentence in a textbook:    "A skunk �s spray makes other animals not see."   While the meaning is clear to me, is this sentence correct grammatically?   Could I use the following sentences:  A skunk �s spray makes other animals not able to see. A skunk �s spray makes other animals not be able to see. A skunk �s spray makes other animals unable to see.
 Thank you!
 |  18 May 2017      
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| The original sentence is a little awkward, but it is correct. Your three options are all good, but #2 doesn �t really need "be", so 1 and 3 are better choices.   Bruce  |  18 May 2017     
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I guess the textbook is trying to limit vocabulary.  It would sound more natural to say the spray blinds animals, or makes animals blind. |  18 May 2017     
					
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