"Another way" vs "in another way"
Solution 1:
A predicate needs its argument to complete the meaning. An object is one as such (direct argument); the preposition phrase is another (oblique argument) but very much essential to the meaning of the sentence. The preposition is the argument marker.
Not going into pedantic details, we can say this much that in both sets of examples WAY
is used all along as a noun. We don't find fault with the first set of examples — IN ANOTHER WAY
— is an Adverb Prepositional Phrase
(preposition in the beginning, its object at the end and a modifier in between; in - another - way). It fulfills oblique argument in the first set of three.
What about the rest? WAY
is not an adverb here. WAY
or for that matter ANOTHER WAY
is an adverbial objective
(they create an object like illusion though not acted upon) or adverbial noun
i.e., nouns used as adverb:
He works mornings and nights.
Mornings and nights
occupy the position earmarked for an object. But a word of caution: adverbial nouns modify verbs and adjectives and they are not used to describe manners.
However, in the first two of the remaining set of three another way
functions as adverbial objective – localising the functionality of the verbs. But in the last sentence we want another way
to function as an adverbial objective assigning the role to describe manners which is contrary to its nature. The last sentence flouts basic rules of semantics and is wrong as such:
He is used to building roads another way.
In this example sentence the participle object phrase building roads
can be classified as an object of another object roads
usurping (leaving no room for) adverbial objective (yet another noun — another way
). So we have:
Building (noun equivalent participle)
Roads (noun)
Another way (noun)
Without a relationship word (preposition) another way
can not be knit in the sentence coherently or logically. However, I have a sort of inner prompting that says that if roads
be replaced by any pronoun (it/this/one) than another way
may be induced in the sentence without a preposition but the rule underlying is beyond my knowledge.