Capital Punishment

An adjunct noun is a noun acting as an adjective, or modifier,

I know. I am the one who told you that. And the rule is that when there is a list with a single adjective in front, an adjunct noun is treated exactly as any other noun.

If you take the phrase:

'We bought new plates and coffee cups'

It would be assumed by any rational person that both the plates and the coffee cups were new.

New is the adjective and coffee is the adjunct noun.
 
I know. I am the one who told you that. And the rule is that when there is a list with a single adjective in front, an adjunct noun is treated exactly as any other noun.

If you take the phrase:

'We bought new plates and coffee cups'

It would be assumed by any rational person that both the plates and the coffee cups were new.

New is the adjective and coffee is the adjunct noun.
In that sentence, yes. But that is a completely different sentence to that used by HWM.
He said "aggravated burglary and theft of cars".
"Aggravated" is an oxymoron of "theft" because theft excludes the use of violence or force.
There's one reason why "aggravated" can not have included "theft"

Now as the court of Appeal said there is no rule that an adjective must apply to al the nouns in a list, it's depends on the context.
As I've shown above the context makes it abundantly clear that "aggravated" cannot apply to "theft".

In addition you are misquoting the definition of a noun adjunct. A noun adjunct is a noun acting as an adjective. It does not join together with the other noun to make a new noun. What you are describing is a compound noun, as in shoeshine, raindrop, etc. These are not nouns adjunct.
A noun adjunct is as I've said, a noun acting as an adjective and describing the other noun, i.e modifying it or differentiating it from other types of that noun, as in theft of cars, and other types of theft.
So that is the second reason why the word "aggravated "does not apply to the "theft of cars".
 
The adjective 'aggravated' can carry over to cover both 'burglary' and 'car theft. So, it actually meant 'aggravated burglary and aggravated car theft'.
Himmy speaks broken English.
He uses a dictionary and AI to sound pompous.
Like Joey in this episode of Friends:


Has @King Billy gone.

I was enjoying the grammar discussion.
They have set time for medications and outdoor walks in the psychiatric institute.
 
Obviously,, nothing like you cannot spell as you are very hot on anyone making a typo in a reply to you, pity nobody has whispered in your ears.
The obvious difference is that I do not repeatedly misspell "quiet". And as I've said interchanged letters is a typical typo.
Whereas you repeatedly and consistently misspell brag. It's only a 4 letter word. So it demonstrates your poor English grammar
In addition you continually claim to have greater wisdom and higher intelligence than others.
That demonstrates your pomposity and arrogance.
 
Himmy speaks broken English.
He uses a dictionary and AI to sound pompous.
Like Joey in this episode of Friends:



They have set time for medications and outdoor walks in the psychiatric institute.
Johnny racist bigot in drags still can't find who it was that he claims said that all Italians are fascists.
So he makes statements that he can't support with evidence.
 
The obvious difference is that I do not repeatedly misspell "quiet". And as I've said interchanged letters is a typical typo.
Whereas you repeatedly and consistently misspell brag. It's only a 4 letter word. So it demonstrates your poor English grammar
In addition you continually claim to have greater wisdom and higher intelligence than others.
That demonstrates your pomposity and arrogance.
I don’t mean to come across that way! My goal is to be as helpful, clear, and a reliable resource for you.
 
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