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I added a comment from the author into the question earlier, now I'm rewording it a little bit so that it fits better with the existing question
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ColleenV
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Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.

SoIs the object(bagels) was omitted in the sentence, which (which sounds a little bit weird to me as a non-native speaker. Is)? Are there any guidelines teaching English learners writing sentence like one?

Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.

So the object(bagels) was omitted in the sentence, which sounds a little bit weird to me as a non-native speaker. Is there any guidelines teaching English learners writing sentence like one?

Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.

Is the object omitted in the sentence (which sounds a little bit weird to me as a non-native speaker)? Are there any guidelines teaching English learners writing sentence like one?

added 195 characters in body
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ColleenV
  • 12k
  • 13
  • 48
  • 86

Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.

So the object(bagels) was omitted in the sentence, which sounds a little bit weird to me as a non-native speaker. Is there any guidelines teaching English learners writing sentence like one?

Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.

Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.

So the object(bagels) was omitted in the sentence, which sounds a little bit weird to me as a non-native speaker. Is there any guidelines teaching English learners writing sentence like one?

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way tang
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No object found in the last part of the sentence, is it grammatical?

Pile them in the frozen-food cabinets with the juice, and there was breakfast ready, oven-fresh, from the east coast to the west.

I am confused about the bold part from an article which talks about bagels, since "breakfast ready", "oven fresh" are adjectives and no object is found here.