still, semantically speaking, it is also wrong to "make a language understandable", here, the "language" does not refer to a second language, the first language, such as, English to English native speakers, and Chinese to most of us.
in this sense, the "language" is already understandable to most of the native speakers, the only thing that remain mysterious is "the nature of language" which is unaware to native speakers.
i think i have made it clear, or, i will have to go to Sapier, Chomsky and Universal Grammar stuff
i bet the sentence was taken out from a linguistic book or paper
以下是引用mjiehu在2003-10-22 11:05:00的发言: the problem is that there is simply no "language" in the sentence, only "the nature of language" and an equivalent phrase "the processes that produce" there
i am sorry, i cannot think of any examples, but according to my understanding, because the "it" appears after two chunks, or two constituents, "the nature of language" and "the processes that produce", it cannot jump into the fragment of either constituent.
如果这个句子如你所说的是: Research during the past several decades on the nature of language and the processes that produce (the language) and make (the nature of language) understandable has revealed great complexity instead of underlying simplicity. 那么THAT后面的两个动作在说两件事情,意思上好象有点散啊。 当然,我不是说这样不可以。
以下是引用mjiehu在2003-10-22 11:09:00的发言: still, semantically speaking, it is also wrong to "make a language understandable", here, the "language" does not refer to a second language, the first language, such as, English to English native speakers, and Chinese to most of us.
但如果是 make the language understandable 呢? 今天我算是又遇上高人mjiehu了。
"here, the "language" does not refer to a second language, BUT the first language"
let us simplify the sentence: Research on A and B and C has revealed D - there is nothing wrong with the structure A= the nature of language B= the processes that proce C= make it (the nature of language) understandable there is only one verb following "that"
Research during the past several decades on (the nature of language) and (the processes that (produce) and (make it understandable)) has revealed great complexity instead of underlying simplicity.