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Today I asked a question on this issue and my intention was to know more about the difference between the two sentences that I provided in the question, but it was marked as a duplicate of this and this.
Although I didn't ask whether those examples are grammatically correct, I accept that it's a potential duplicate since my examples were not chosen carefully.
Let's get back to my problem with such sentences. Suppose that you want to say something in a comment (like facebook) and there is not enough context to rule out some options. Consider the following examples:
- He liked the manager signing the paper.
- He liked the manager's signing the paper.
In nutshell, I think
- First sentence means he liked that specific manager who was signing the paper.
- Second one means he liked the way that manger signed the paper.
Would you please tell me your opinion on this?
"He liked the manager's signing of the paper" is the interpretation invited by the second, as you say. – P. E. Dant Reinstate Monica – 2017-06-23T22:36:28.913