I believe that the advantages of buying a property greatly outweigh the short-term savings to be made by renting.
In above sentence what is the role of to be
in ("to be made")? Can I write "that are made" instead.
I guess "to be made" is the short for "that are intended to be made" if this is correct is this structure a general structure and can be use in other similar situations?
No comments:
Post a Comment