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3 Comments
a study and researched
The last two sentences make no sense. In the last sentence, the 'however' seems to separate two clauses that agree with each other (the first clause refers to the condition set in the previous sentence). Am I right?
That last sentence is quirky with the "however" in the middle. However usually means "conversely" but not in this case. I think the placement of the word is what makes the difference. In this case, the dash continues the same thought. I am not sure it could be called grammatically correct, but after reading it a few times I understand it. I interpret the last two sentences "together" (very important) to say this: If you learn to overcome the "bracing strategy" then you may be disabling something that was put there for your own benefit.